Imagine staring death in the face. Imagine knowing that you are about
to die in a foreign country, and the majority of people whom you are dying for
do not even know your name. Now imagine having the courage to continue on in
the face of this almost certain death.
The men who fought gallantly during the D-Day Invasion did not have to
imagine these things. They lived each one June 6, 1944. As 160,000 Allied
troops approached the French coastline, there was no time for second guessing
and no time for turning back in fear. There was only moving forward.
It takes more than courage to do something like that. It takes the
belief that what you are fighting for is of greater worth than your life. These
soldiers clearly believed that protecting this country, and the world, carried
more importance than their own life. They were able to put aside everything of
comfort and familiarity for the future of millions of people.
“We've got to remember the folks who did it and those who still do it –
the one percent who go into harm’s way for the benefit of the (other) 99
percent,” Dave De Soucy, a retired officer who served in combat during the Vietnam
War, said in an article on the United States Army’s website.
This day in United States history could arguably be one of the most
important days in our past. This was the beginning of the end for Hitler. It
was a huge step in ending World War II. But it was also the end of thousands of
soldiers. Their last act on this earth was fighting for freedom for not only
their family, but also for strangers.
How should this knowledge affect the way we as Americans live our
lives? Should knowing that men who fought nearly 70 years ago to ensure that we
can live in freedom influence us in any way?
If this knowledge affects anything, it should at least affect our pride
in this country and in our soldiers. We should take pride in the fact that these
men took enough pride in their country to give up their lives for its safety
and for the safety of those living in it.
“It is important that (people) recognize that the freedoms they enjoy
today are a result of the sacrifice of millions of people from all over the world
that ensured their liberty,” Joseph W. Westphal, under secretary of the Army, said
in another article on the United States Army’s website. “No greater act of
bravery was ever carried out than that of millions of citizen soldiers, and
civilians, who faced and defeated tyranny and rebuilt this country and the
world.”
This day should be an inspiration to those of us who may never stare
death in the face. It should inspire us to be strong and stand up to whatever
our personal Normandy beaches are. And, just as Dwight D. Eisenhower said, we
should “accept nothing less than full victory” when we storm these beaches.
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