Normandy American Cemetery facing the English Channel above Omaha Beach. Photo GLK.
The 75th anniversary of D-Day is the occasion to commemorate the lives and actions and deaths of those involved in “the greatest sea invasion of military history” as well as the opportunity to reflect on how the events of 1944 relate to us, individually and collectively, today. We would be remiss to do one without the other.
Through movies, documentaries, books, speeches, visits and the stories of veterans, we have many memories and visions of D-Day and the ensuing 10-week Battle of Normandy. And we are moved, in a generic sense, by the view of the imaculate lawns and orderly Crosses and occasional Star of David at the American Cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach. But moved to do what, exactly? To take pictures? To shout “We’re number one”? To jump from a parachute? To open a B&B near the coast? To read deeper? To fight for world peace? To learn about the experiences of veterans of other foreign wars? To visit other war cemeteries? To wonder why we aren’t equally “moved” by the thought of soldiers who died in Vietnam or Iraq? To honor The Four Freedoms?
Each head of state who speaks at a major ceremony seeks to interpret D-Day and the events leading to it and flowing from it in such a way that it presents a lesson or thread that fits with his or her vision of the world today. Each of them attempts to articulate his or her nations ambitions relative to the past. Passing time and evolving circumstances require that, at the risk of losing the thread altogether or twisting it to tie up an otherwise unrelated vision.
Museums, memorials, exhibitions and events throughout the former battle zone of Normandy have also evolved over time as they, too, seek to present the connection between then and now. And each major commemorative year brings with it new ways of informing, guiding, entertaining and profiting from visitors drawn to the region’s war history. Those developments are telling in their own way.
Beyond the commemorative ceremonies that accompany the 75th anniversary of D-Day and of the liberation of Norman villages and towns that followed, here are five ways in which organizations and businesses are using, (re)interpreting or inspired by Normandy’s wartime memory in 2019.
1. Normandy’s International Forum for Peace
The Peacemakers: That’s the theme of Normandy’s second annual International Forum for Peace, held in Caen June 4 and 5, i.e. immediately prior to the 75th anniversary commemorations. The forum was created in the context of Normandy’s memory of war but is focused on dealing with present wars and future conflicts rather than on the past. This year’s discussions and debates will concern tensions in Cameroon, the impact of Brexit on Irish Peace Accords, the post-peace process in Colombia, Chinese diplomacy in the new world order, conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the civil war in Syria, among other conflicts. Forum participants will be invited to sign the Normandy Peace Manifesto to be presented by four Nobel Peace Prize recipients—Jody Williams (American; involved in the fight against anti-personnel mines), Mohamed El Baradei (Egyptian; former Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency), Leymah Gbowee (Liberian; leader of the Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace) and José Romos Horta (East Timorese; former president who worked for a peaceful solution to the conflict in East Timora)—and other recognized and would-be peacemakers. The prevailing view of participants, if not by leaders of the world’s most powerful militaries, will undoubtedly be that of multilateralism and the sense of an international community are the central tenets of making peace.
2. Rockwell, Roosevelt & The Four Freedoms at the Caen Memorial Museum
In January 1941, eleven months before the United States declared war on Japan then on Germany, Franklin Roosevelt articulated in his State of the Union speech the four fundamental freedoms that he said should be enjoyed by people everywhere: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, freedom from fear. For its exhibition in this 75th anniversary year, the Caen Memorial Museum, in partnership with the Norman Rockwell Museum, is presenting an exhibition of Rockwell’s work with his iconic paintings of the Four Freedoms as its centerpiece. The Rockwell paintings were first published in The Saturday Evening post in early 1943, by which time the United States was well into its engagement in the war. Needless to say, such a speech would not be given today, and today the paintings themselves might be misinterpreted as honoring nostalgia rather than freedom. Other famous and lesser-known works by Rockwell and his contemporaries give necessary context to those freedoms and those paintings. The exhibition runs from June 10 to October 27, 2019. Here’s the trailer:
3. Great Women During the War at the Juno Beach Centre
Canada is not a bellicose nation, so it’s no surprise that the Juno Beach Centre, situated just off the beach where Canadian forces landed on June 6, 1944, is the least militaristic of the museums in the Landing Zone, not to mention the one with the friendliest staff. The Centre is at once a memorial, a museum and a cultural center dedicated not only to the Canadian role in the Second World War but to broader cultural issues, then and now. The current exhibition, running through December 2019, speaks of the contributions of women during the war. It examines their courage, anguish, fear and mourning as well as the ways in which they led the way to changes in society.
4. Dinner with veterans at La Chenevière
La Chenevière, a 5-star chateau-hotel with restaurant just inland from the port of Port-en-Bessin on the route to Bayeux, is collaborating with The Greatest Generation Foundation to host a series of 17 dinner events featuring the presence of American veterans who took part in the Battle of Normandy 1944. The evening begins with a brief lecture that is then followed by a gastronomic meal during which participants have the opportunity to converse with one of the veterans. These dinners, which began in April, take place every other Thursday until Nov. 28, 2019. 190€ per person, reservation required. It isn’t necessary to spend the night at the hotel to attend.
5. Expansion of the Overlord Museum at Colleville-sur-Mer
The Overlord Museum opened in 2014 in time for the 70th anniversary by the roundabout to the entrance to the American Cemetery. It’s a private museum created by Nicolas Leloup, the son of a collector of WWII military vehicles and other military artefacts. The staging of this large collection of war material follows a tendency on the part of certain museums, especially private museums, to dramatize displays in order to appeal to a public that might otherwise be bored or lost with a straightforward or explanatory presentation. The 75th anniversary year brings with it an extension to the museum that includes a scene about the Mortrain counterattack and a section dedicated to the role of the aviation. But the drama isn’t always staged. Sometimes it’s naturally present yet removed from war, as in the presentation of Ian Patrick’s photographs from his book Anonymous Heroes, showing veterans who returned to the Landing Beaches for D-Day commemorations 45 to 60 years later.
See Taps in the Normandy American Cemetery, A France Revisited Minute.
© 2019, Gary Lee Kraut