D-Day 6th June 1944.

General discussion of the Project Reality: BF2 modification.
Pantera
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Joined: 2006-02-16 11:27

D-Day 6th June 1944.

Post by Pantera »

I couldnt find this topic here and i searched! but no luck, we need to respect the soldiers.

Today, some 62 years ago, British/American/Canadian soldiers landed on the harsh beaches of Normandy, France. The beaches were cut down into seperate landing zones.
  • Omaha - American Forces hit this beach
  • Utah - American Forces hit this beach
  • Gold - British Forces hit this beach
  • Juno - Canadian Forces hit this beach
  • Sword - British Forces hit this beach
(Map attached bellow)

This poem is dedicated to the brave soldiers that landed on the beaches of Normandy, June 6th 1944.

Memories

The quiet rippling of the waves,
Try to wash the memories away.
I lay on the sands of history,
Remembering my sorry fate,
A silent victim of that time,
But I go unseen, unheard, by people passing by,
Merely a memory of a terrible time.

No one sees my blood spilled on the yellow dunes,
No one hears my cry as they pass by.
I remember blood, noise, the stench of battle and war.
But the waters of time try to wash that away.
No stench of war, no bloodstained beaches
These things go unseen, unheard by people passing by,
Merely memories of a horrifying time.

We went with smiles on our faces,
Pride in our hearts.
Feeling like we can make a difference.
We sang and laughed and held our heads high.
The eyes of the world are turning to us.
But these things go unseen, unheard by people passing by,
Merely memories of a proud time.

We jumped into ice cold water up to our faces,
We carried our burdensome packs on our backs,
We were bombarded by shells that hit the beaches,
Sand flew up in our eyes and blinded our instincts,
Bodies were ripped into shreds by machine guns,
But these things go unseen, unheard by people passing by,
Merely memories of a hell bent time.

So I lie on this beach, and remember that time,
Where we were courageous, and great men had died.
I realise how meaningful we were to the world,
To see people walking with free will and life,
And as I rest, watching the world with my comrades,
People pass by my silent white grave,
Not knowing my story as they look at my name,
Merely a memory of a worthwhile time.

Poem By James Gill...

I salute the soldiers who fought that day. *Salute*
Last edited by Pantera on 2006-06-06 12:42, edited 1 time in total.
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Gaz
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Post by Gaz »

nice post. we will remember them.

Going to The Somme in France at the end of the month to do the cenetaph guard. Should be a great experience.
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Army Musician
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Post by Army Musician »

Slight correction it is 62 years ago not 65, yes I salute them all
Pantera
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Post by Pantera »

Army Musician wrote:Slight correction it is 62 years ago not 65, yes I salute them all
Slight Typo, Sorry.
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[SS] Raikkonen21
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Post by [SS] Raikkonen21 »

lest we forget
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Dandy
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Post by Dandy »

You forgett, Caen bech and Point du Hoc!!! They were all parts of D-day
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[ZiiP]DarkJester
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Post by [ZiiP]DarkJester »

lest we forget
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Koolchamp
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Post by Koolchamp »

And lets not forget the paratroopers that dropped in before anyone hit the beaches.

*Salute*
Cheers,

Koolchamp
Solitas
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Post by Solitas »

Lest We Forget.

Lets keep it on topic people, any other thread is fair game but not this one
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trogdor1289
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Post by trogdor1289 »

lest we forget and *salute*
longhairedhippy
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Post by longhairedhippy »

Darth.Skyline wrote:
(Map attached bellow)
Where's the map?
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Figisaacnewton
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Post by Figisaacnewton »

God bless them and keep them, and may we never forget thier great and noble sacrifice.
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freebirdcjb
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Post by freebirdcjb »

One of the gutsiest, if not the gutsiest invasion in military history. It was a huge risk, because the Germans knew they were coming. But they did it anyway. I can only dream to have guts like that. Great men who pulled it off as well. Never forget those men.
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USM-ST3.Spyder
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Post by USM-ST3.Spyder »

And you hear nothing about it, all you hear is OH MY GOD ITS 666 THE WORLD IS GOING TO END.
RikiRude
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Post by RikiRude »

^ agreed.

i almost forgot about it myself.

to those that put their life for their country, and even more to those who were pulled into the war due to the draft
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Braddock096
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Post by Braddock096 »

And also for the poor sods who didn't have a choice.

War is bad mmmkay?
Lugubrum
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Post by Lugubrum »

USM-ST3.Spyder wrote:And you hear nothing about it, all you hear is OH MY GOD ITS 666 THE WORLD IS GOING TO END.
Because there where so many battles on so many diferent places, then on the news they would have to inform you every week about a particulair battle that happenend in WWII. :-D Two years ago I was on vacation in Normandy to see the old Atlantikwall. A lot of different landing places I went to and because it was 60 years ago there where a lot of museums about the invasion. The German bunkers and heavy defences where great to see, makes you wonder how the Allies ever where able to set a foot on land. And those German cannons could shoot many, many miles in the sea (I think I still have some pictures of those). Also I visited a place which has been heavily bombed by the Allies and they never restored the bombed ground so you could see the huge craters from the artillery shells. It looked like Teletubby land. There where also bunkers with more than 1 meter thick concrete (maybe thicker, I can't remember exactly) which where ripped apart by bombs. And the beaches are very big in Normandy. And I also visited German and Allied cemetaries. A lot of Germans who died over there where just 17 years old (saw that on the graves). And from both sides the ages where around 20-25 years old. And next to the place I slept there was a beautiful blondhaired girl. Her grandfather was English/Scottish and took part of the invasion and after the invasion he married a French woman. They had kids and those kids had other kids and she (the blond girl) was one of those kids! But she could barely speak English and I can't speak French... Well, just wanted to say that. :p
~WPN~callum247
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Post by ~WPN~callum247 »

I got nothin but respect for the old vets. I don't like how they are forgotten because its 06/06/06 though, and the fact that they are somewhat egnored today is real bad too.
Dandy wrote:You forgett, Caen bech and Point du Hoc!!! They were all parts of D-day
Point di hoc was part of Omaha landing and Caen wasn't a beach. Caen was a village more in-land taken by British forces.

And these are the bomb crators you mean lugubrum?

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eddie
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Post by eddie »

Yes, lest we forget!

My grandpa remembers taking part in D-Day sailing one of the little carriers to the beach (and back to the ship!). It must have taken alot of guts for all involved, especially as some of the Brits weren't overly keen to be in the Army!

And my Grandpa was pleased they dropped the atom bomb (no offence) but he would of been among the first fleet to invade Japan and I wouldn't be here now going on about it :p

Remember them all, even the people still alive!
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Braddock096
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Post by Braddock096 »

Caen is a city, not a village.

I'm very glad I wasn't there when those shells were landing.
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