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HomeMy WebLinkAboutD-Day 2007 The Earle. g Jim Wilson Donnis Baggett Robert C. Borden Publisher Editor-in-Chief Opinions Editor i editboard@theeagle.com Thank you to D- Da s hero es heir -ranks are thinning now, but the courage they showed on .the beaches and in the skies over France 63 years ago will live forever. It was on D-Day -June 6, 1944 -that some 156,000 Allied soldiers - 73,000 of them i American -stormed the beaches of Normandy in the ,' ~` largest seaborne invasion in history. ' So much went wrong that day, but somehow the Allies were victorious, securing all five beaches along the 60-mile invasion front by the end of the first day. There were heroes that day, so many heroes. Among them was James ~, Earl Rudder, who led his Rangers as they scaled the steep cliffs of Pointe du Hoc under withering German fire. :: Wounded twice, Rudder refused to leave his command until his assigned task to silence giant German guns was accomplished. What the Allies accomplished that day and in the days and months to follow wasn't easy. The opening 30 minutes of Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan can only hint at .the horror and confusion. At Omaha Beach alone, 6,000 of the 35,000 Americans first to land were killed or wounded in the opening hour. Another 8,000 would die or be wound- ed before the day was done. While most of the soldiers who went ashore were from the United States, Great Britain or Canada, there were also troops from Australia, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France, Greece, Holland, New Zealand, Norway and Poland. Brav- ery abounded. The war would continue for another year and thousands more people died, but in the end, freedom endured. The young men of D-Day are old and gray now, their steps slowed. But at a time when the world desperately needed courage and determination, they stepped forward and answered freedom's call. Today, we can only thank them for their service and be humbled by their sacrifice. God bless them all.