D-Day: Respect, Engineering and Leadership (original) (raw)
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n May 8th, 1945 – known as Victory in Europe Day or V-E Day – celebrations erupted around the world to mark the end of a nearly six year war that had cost the lives of millions; destroyed homes, families, and cities; and brought huge suffering to the populations of entire countries. Millions of people rejoiced in the news that Germany had surrendered, relieved that the intense strain of the war was finally over. In towns and cities across the world, people marked the victory with street parties, dancing and singing.
MON HISTOIRE DU DE-BARQUEMENT / MY D-DAY STORY
The Arts of War and Peace , 2022
Born in 1927, Mme Thérèse TOUZEAU LEMARCHAND has been an active member of the Saint-Contest community, and until the recent COVID period, she was attending events of the Comité de jumelage, Le Club de Francophonie/Les Amis du Canada, and Le comité pour l'histoire de Saint-Contest to name a few. On these occasions, we have had the chance to discuss her D-Day story that begins with Thérèse jumping out of the first story window of her boarding house. Only 17 years old at the time, Thérèse's account is interesting for its first-person point of view of a young woman separated from her family and her beau. A personal recollection, the story is until now, unpublished, and it is an example of a woman writing about the war. This testimony does not include specific technical vocabulary about regiments or vehicles, and even the chronology is a little blurry. In the following pages, Mme TOUZEAU recounts her movements between Caen, Douvres-la-Délivrande, Thaon, and Saint-Contest, a linear distance of about 15 kilometers. The striking episodes from Thérèse's story are those dealing with her own personal encounters with death (walking over corpses and unable to free an entrapped nurse), fear (observing Canadian and German soldiers in hand-to-hand combat), and the search for her family. For those of us who did not experience D-Day first-hand, Mme TOUZEAU's story helps us to understand the lapse of time necessary to liberate Caen and its surroundings: from June 5 to August 27, the 17-year old lived in uncertainty regarding her family and her home. https://artswarandpeace.univ-paris-diderot.fr/2022/07/10/mon-histoire-du-debarquement-my-d-day-story/
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