My Charles Odyssey is getting bigger and bigger and continues to bear amazing gifts. The deeper I dig, the bigger and more significant the returns. If I wasn’t already convinced that the path I’m on is lit by some cosmic or spirited tour guide, I am now.
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Charles and We Three 1944 |
When I knew I was going to the UK for a great work opportunity, I began to plan a trip to Normandy. Ahead of my trip, I had contacted Jean-Marc Bonnet, Secretary for the volunteer organization, Normandy for Air Remembrance (NAAR), to see if anyone might be available or willing to help me locate and visit Charles’ memorial placed near his crash site in Bréhal, France. Jean-Marc’s response was more than I expected. The memorial was identified, the crash site located, interviews and testimonials from village residents recorded and a visit was being organized. Two days before my arrival in France, Jean-Marc sent me an email and asked if I would prepare a speech to deliver at the ‘ceremony’. Of course I said yes, and then the panic and anxiety set in, along with the realization that something so much bigger than I ever expected was waiting for me in Normandy. That’s when the emotions took hold and the tears were a constant companion for the next few days.
Meeting Jean-Marc |
Reception in Bréhal |
After the reception, a group of about twenty, including a local reporter, took the short drive to the memorial site for the ceremony. It was a landslide of emotions when the memorial finally came into view. French and American flags flanked the pretty little patch of land where the monument had been placed. It was shaded by trees and across the little road was a quiet little pond, and no big surprise at this point, more poppies.
The man leading the way is a resident of Bréhal - he was five years old when Charles crashed and he remembered where the plane had landed. |
Bridget told me that we were going to the crash site. There wer more tears. But then the men who were hosting me went to their cars and started pulling out shovels, picks and a metal detector. They weren't going to just show me the crash site, they were going to find pieces of Charles’ plane for me to take home to my grandmother. The ugly cry got even uglier.
First peice of the plane presented by the land owner to the group. |
Jacques went to work with the metal detector and they were deligthed and excited every time it pinged. They took turns digging at the hot spots and with each new discovery, they handed the little peices of metal over with pride. They found a peice of the engine block, three small peices of aluminum from the plane and a rusted out chunk of German anti-aircraft bomb - likely the kind of flak that took Charles down. The man I mentioned earlier, the resident who happened by, was even helping dig. Before he left, he came to me and hugged and kissed me and in English he said, "Please give your grandmere a hug and a kiss and tell her thank you for her sacrifice." It was a sentiment that was repeated over and over to me as- others joined in the search and when every small piece of the plane was recovered and presented to me. The sincerity and gratitude that was shared with me was beautiful and made me feel an incredible sense of pride.
Charles' Memorial |
Jean-Marc and Felix spent the next day taking me to all the memorial sites in Normandy, each location being more emotional than the last. The history regarding the biggest and most well known memorial in Normandy, The Normandy American Cemetary, is that it was started by the US Army on June 8, 1944. There are 9,387 graves and an another 1,557 names inscribed on the Wall of the Missing - most of those honored here were lost on D-Day landings or operations soon after. The care and sensitivity in which these mostly French volunteers and caretakers of these American monuments express, is phenomenal. It’s very important to them that the US contribution to the war and more importantly, their liberation from German occupation is not forgotten. It was an incredible experience. Normandy should be on everyone’s bucket list.
Jean-Marc and me athe Normandy American Cemetary |
I asked Jean-Marc about how I could make a donation to The Normandy for Air Remembrance so that this volunteer organization could continue their work locating unidentified crash sites and service men, notifying families when discoveries are made and also hosting ceremonies and experiences like I was so fortunate to have had. His reply was that I couldn’t and that Charles’ blood and our families sacrifice was payment enough. Then he said, “An article must be written.” I’ve sent out story inquiries to every newspaper outlet I can think of and to Texas Monthly and O Magazine. I’m hopeful.
My friends Elizabeth and CJ think my Normandy experience should be another book. Tara thinks it should be a movie. But until Spielberg knocks on my door, I think maybe I should try to get through the first one and see how it goes. Charles may have other ideas, but for now I’m going to spend some time in my little fiction bubble and focus on the project at hand.