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A French woman says:
“MERCI
BEAUCOUP, AMERICA”!
I
felt proud again and motivated afresh by the recent speech delivered by
French President Nicolas Sarkozy to the American Congress.
Nations, like people, have a calling. The calling of America is one of a
“deliverer nation.” Personally, I will eternally be grateful to America
for the role of “deliverer” America has played in my life:
The
first time was in 1944 when America crossed the Atlantic “to deliver us
from Germany.”
The
second time was when I was “born again” on the American soil. Had you
not come over to free us and had I not learnt English, the narration of
my life would have been totally different. People ask if “I am a
war-bride?” Not so! I was nine years old in 1944: At the very best, I
qualify as “a war-child!”
I
understand why a man would defend his own country but I ask what moves a
man to rise up and deliver another man’s land?
At
dawn of the 6th of JUNE 1944, the Armada of the Allied
Nations set forth across the English Channel and drew near the fortified
beaches of occupied France. Never before nor since has such a glorious
feat been accomplished, nor such a battle arrayed! I have pondered what
those young men were thinking in the preceding hours before the
invasion, each one being aware that many - too many - would fall and
that, themselves could be among the fallen! This is what some wrote
before landing: “We don’t consider ourselves heroes. We want this war to
be over. But however much dread we may feel, you can count on us.” As
any of us would, they experienced dread, but dread didn’t keep them
away!
The flagship Belfast was designated to fire the first volley of the
invasion. The captain read to his men from Shakespeare, Henri V;
“We few, we happy few, we
band of brothers, for he to-day who sheds his blood with me shall be my
brother.”
176,000 men landed in the first 24 hours . . .
We
call it “LE DEBARQUEMENT”, you call it “D-DAY”, was a combined effort of
many armies coming together: Learn from the fact that their strength
stemmed from their unity. The Americans were there, the British were
there, the Canadians were there and the Free French Forces were there
also, under General Jacques Philippe Leclerc, among them many from the
lands of Africa fought on the side of France.
THE
BATTLE OF NORMANDY lasted a total of seven weeks. It took nearly three
months for the Allied Forces to free their way to Paris . . . one
kilometer at a time.
IN
PARIS (I just turned nine) WE WAITED! Our sole comfort was the Boom!
Boom!
Boom!
of the BBC: No one in our family understood a word of English - but we
put our trust in the sound of the voice of Winston Churchill. I remember
particularly well the last two weeks as we barricaded ourselves behind
our metal shutters to deflect any stray bullet. At that point, we were
living on our last reserve of spaghetti, without sauce or salt.
One
kilometer away, Place de la République, the Germans had ambushed every
avenue with a gun and shot at everything that moved. The underground
subway passed right under the apartment building. We had heard that,
rather than give up, the Germans were considering blowing up the city by
setting up explosives throughout the subway. Instead, we stood ready for
total victory with our own French flag discreetly hidden at the back of
our radio! (my mother’s idea!)
Nine times, the order was sent by the Furher to General Dietrich Von
Choltitz in charge of the Greater Paris, to “make Paris a heap of
ruins.” But Von Choltitz, in his own words, says: “If for the first time
I disobeyed, it was because I knew that Hitler was insane.” History
records that it was the Swedish Counsel in Paris, Raoul Nordling, a
Diplomat, who negotiated with the Germans and prevented the destruction
of Paris.
The
last days were days of great tension when, on the one hand, WE KNEW “the
Allies” were coming, and on the other, we were aware that the enemy was
not going to
give up easily. Any scenario could have played out. On the
15th of August, 1944, hundreds of French political prisoners
were still sent to Buchenwald. On the 16th of August, 35
young Resistants were executed in the Bois de Boulogne for reprisals. On
the 19th of August the F.F.I. (the French Forces of the
Interior), also called the French Resistance, took the Liberation of
Paris into their own hands.
The
F.F.I. called for “a general mobilization of all patriotic bodies, from
18 to 50, able to carry a weapon, to join the struggle against the
invader”. On the 20th, the Parisians took to the streets and
began building the barricades with trees, pavement and sand bags: Some
barricades were positioned in chicanes to slow down the movements of
the enemy. Older men, women and children were there, carrying one paving
stone at a time . . . I remember watching a man crossing the avenue by
pulling himself on his elbows, lest, if he stood, he be killed with the
bullet of a German sniper!
On
the 22nd and 23rd of August skirmishes reached
their height
when,
under von Choltitz orders, the Germans burned the Grand Palais, then an
F.F.I. stronghold, and panzers (tanks) fired against the barricades. It
is estimated that some 1,500 Resistance members and civilians were
killed during the Battle for Paris.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation _of_Paris
Later that day the 2nd Armored Division’s vanguard commanded
by Captain Dronne entered Paris and reached the City Hall. General
Leclerc’s message to the Resistance was “HOLD ON, WE ARE ARRIVING
TO-MORROW!!!” The next day, on the 25th of August 1944,
after bitter fighting, the Free French 2nd Armored Division
under the leadership of General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque rolled
into the capital and marched down the Champs-Elysées.
General Omar Bradley honored General Philippe Leclerc by letting his 2nd
Armored Division fight their way into Paris first and complete the
Liberation of the City sparked by the F.F.I.

I
still remember the telephone call from one of our cousins, the kind who
knows more than anyone else: “THEY CLAMOURED IN THE TELEPHONE: “THEY
ARE HERE, . . . THE ALLIES ARE HERE, THEY ARE ON THE BOULEVARDS
. . . To us, it meant: “FREEDOM HAS LANDED!”
THE
SAME DAY, August 25th, 1944, after a fierce battle at the
Hotel Meurice - then the German HQ - General Dietrich von Choltitz,
commander of the Paris garrison and military governor of Paris
surrendered. Later in the day, he signed the Instrument of Surrender at
the Gare Montparnasse railway station in front of General Leclerc and
Colonel Rol, commander of the F.F.I. in the Paris region.
Led
by the bourdon of Notre-Dame, every church bell began to echo
throughout the city! The heart of Paris was beating again. To
us, it was the signal we, Parisians, had been waiting for: At the sound
of the bells the crowd began flowing into the streets . . . Not even
danger could hold them back! From our second floor open windows, my
family and myself were watching this human river flow down the avenue. I
remember a woman, wearing a dress she herself had made with the French,
American and English flags sewn together: She was decreeing “D-DAY”, THE
DAY OF VICTORY, with her own attire.
Finally, my mother gave in to our pressure . . . grabbing my younger
sister and myself we
ran
down the stairs leading to the avenue and disappeared into the crowd . .
. Place of the République, German prisoners were yet surrendering
under our own eyes. An amazing sight! *
The
F.F.I. had waited four years to settle their differences with the Milice
who were the pro-Germans French elements. Suddenly, bullets started to
fly: “La Guerre des Toits”or the roof-war was “on”. It was time to
settle the owes and the dues. Women who had befriended German officers
were sheered, tarred and feathered! I was too young to understand? . .
. But I remember my mother pushing us both quickly under a porch, Place
de la République, to take shelter from flying bullets!
The day after La Libération, on August 26th, General de
Gaulle led a parade down the Champs Elysées with General Leclerc, all
the way to Notre-Dame. They even braved sporadic sniper fire inside the
cathedral itself from pockets of German resistance that remained.
After the arrival of the U.S. Army’s 28th Infantry Division,
a combined Franco-American military parade was organized on the 29th,
down the Champs Elysées and throughout the city streets. Delirious
crowds greeted

L’Armée de la Libération and the American Division as Liberators.
I
was too young for the “kisses” but I quickly learnt
that the fellows driving the Jeeps were in charge of the chocolate!!!!
Yah! My first piece of chocolate was given to me by an American soldier
. . . That’s right! I will NEVER forget that! “MERCI POUR LE CHOCOLAT!”
. . . My mother quickly advised: “Do not swallow the chewing-gum!”
A
few years back, my American husband, Dr James E Lovell and I visited the
NORMANDY AMERICAN CEMETERY AND MEMORIAL. The cemetery site covers 172
acres. There are 9,386 American War Dead buried there. The remains of
approximately 14,000 others originally buried in Normandy were returned
home at the request of their next of kin. The average age is twenty and
under. The Christian crosses alternate with the Stars of David: In a
silent garden, they rest silently, until the Day of the trumpet call.
Round the corner from the American Cemetery and Memorial, you need to
go to LA POINTE DU HOC, a 100 ft cliff, once a German bastion that stood
between Omaha and Utah Beach:
This is the description of the attack as written in wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointe_du_Hoc
“With La Pointe du Hoc, situated between Utah Beach to the West and
Omaha Beach to the East, these guns threatened Allied landings on both
beaches, risking heavy casualties in the landing forces. The U.S. 2nd
Ranger Battalion was
therefore given the task of destroying the strongpoint early on D-Day.
The Ranger battalion was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel James Earl
Rudder. The plan called for the three companies of Rangers to be landed
by sea at the foot of the cliffs, scale them using ropes, ladders and
grapples under enemy fire, and engage the enemy at the top of the cliff.
This was to be carried out before the main landings. The Rangers trained
for the cliff assault on the Isle of Wight, under the direction of
British Commandos.
Prior to the attack, the guns were moved approximately 1 mile away.
Removal of the guns had actually been completed two days prior on June 4th,
1944, but poor weather conditions prior to the invasion limited a final
reconnaissance effort which would have revealed the guns’ removal.
‘This act alone had to be GOD!’
The
costliest part of the battle for the Rangers came after the cliff
assault. Determined to hold the vital ground, yet isolated from other
assault forces, they fended off several German counterattacks over the
next two days, until reinforced from Omaha Beach. The original plans
called for an additional, larger Ranger force of eight companies to
follow the first attack, if successful. Flares from the cliff tops were
to signal this second wave to joint the attack, but because of the
delayed landing, the signal came too late. And the other Rangers, mostly
of the U.S. 5th Ranger Battalion, landed on Omaha instead of
Pointe du Hoc.
At
the end of the 2-day action, the landing force of 225+ was reduced to
about 90 men who could still fight.”
THESE WERE THE DAYS WHEN EVERY MAN WAS A HERO!
Jim
and I scoured the ground at the top of the cliffs. Wisely the place has
been left untouched as was at the end of the battle. The craters where
the bombs fell are still there. We entered the German bunkers and
photographed the horizon seen through the gun holes. The barbed wire is
still in place. Only the grass has returned to “cover” over the scene
and give it life.
In
January 1979, grateful France bequeathed La Pointe du Hoc to the United
States where you can watch the Star Spangled Banner fly into the wind.
It
was right and it was good that French President Nicolas Sarkozy, on
November 7th, 2007, thanked the Americans for coming and
liberating France and Europe at the end of WWII. Should I have been
present, I too would have joined the Members of the U.S. Senate and the
House of Representatives, in their numerous standing ovations.
Indeed, France will never forget how “thousands of young American
soldiers lay who had fallen not to defend their own freedom but the
freedom of all others, not to defend their own families, their own
homeland, but to defend humanity as a whole.”
Before they landed, Eisenhower told them: “The eyes of the world are
upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere
march with you.”
To-day, I say to you, America, “THE EYES OF THE WORLD ARE STILL UPON
YOU” . . . . . Indeed, we will NEVER FORGET and we will CONTINUE
TO TELL the next generations of the sacrifices of those who’s BLOOD YET
SPEAKETH!
*
Watch the 30 minute film on the Liberation of Paris, filmed live,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_of_Paris go to Page 11,
Filmography and click on “La Liberation de Paris (1944)

Evangelist Francine J Lovell
Founder & President
End-Time Harvest, Inc
PO
Box 340
Omaha, Arkansas 72662-0340
USA
RES
870 426 5377
Email
jflovell@omahaweb.net |