D-Day+81 – Why they fought

D-Day – the 6th of June, 1944: “The Longest Day,” as it was called in the classic 1962 film of that name. Then came “The Americanization of Emily”  (1964 – D-Day+30). And “Saving Private Ryan.” (1998). Unforgettable images of Americans storming Normandy’s “Omaha Beach,” dying in the water, dying on the land, scaling those impossible cliffs to overtake the German defenses and go on to win the war in Europe. The war against fascism. The cause for which they fought resonates today on these shores, so it is worth recalling their battle and their sacrifices as they fought and died for liberty.

In 1994, on D-Day’s 50th anniversary, I was privileged to tell their story in The Washington Post through interviews with the veterans of that bloody, terrible and ultimately triumphal day. Fourteen years later, my wife Sandy and I visited Omaha Beach, by then a family vacation spot, and also the nearby American cemetery, a solemn place where there are 9,388 grave sites of the fallen Americans. The grave markers were mainly crosses, but there were also Stars of David to indicate that Jewish Americans also fought and died there. We left stones to remember and memorialize them.

In earlier blog posts, I reprised my D-Day story, and I do so again here.

“They Survived a Beach Called Omaha,” which ran in the Washington Post on May 30, 1994.

They are old men now, in their seventies and eighties, living in retirement in comfortable neighborhoods in the Washington area, but forever linked by a beach called Omaha.

The Capital Jewish Museum: It’s personal. So many thoughts. Two of my sons are fifth generation Jewish Washingtonians, and our family has donated items to this museum, which is more than a collection of artifacts. The old synagogue around which the current museum was built was the first building to house Adas Israel, a Conservative congregation where my wife’s relatives worshipped at the beginning of the last century and where, in 1987, we were married. The murder of a  couple emerging from a “Young Diplomats Reception” held to discuss “humanitarian diplomacy” and bringing such aid to the Middle East and North Africa was not a random crime. And that the engaged couple happened to be employed by the Israeli embassy here, around which much of the coverage centered, didn’t matter.  They were simply Jews. The alleged assailant cried out “free. free Palestine” as he entered the museum after he had committed the deed and later said, “I did it for Gaza.”  Once again, all Jews are being held responsible for the actions of a foreign government of which they may or may not approve.  In the world of Jew hatred, there is no nuance; it simply does not matter. The peaceful “Free the Hostages” marchers in Boulder, Colorado  were similarly stereotyped.  Their views on Israeli attacks in Gaza are unknown, and irrelevant. They were presumed to be Jews, and that was sufficient probable cause for a pro-Palestinian flame thrower to seek their destruction.  That he had overstayed his immigrant visa is also irrelevant. The man charged with murder at the Capital Jewish Museum is a native Chicagoan.  The crime is violent antisemitism, pure and simple.

Finally: See you on June 14, in small towns and big cities, along highways and in public squares, and wherever freedom still rings, where FDR’s Four Freedoms enunciated in 1941 are still relevant: Freedom of speech and expression, Freedom of worship, Freedom from want, and lastly Freedom from fear. It is patriotic to protest.  June 14 is also Flag Day, marking Old Glory’s adoption in 1777.  It’s not a day for showy military parades down Pennsylvania Avenue or to wish #47 happy birthday.  It’s an American holiday. If you wish, don’t be ashamed or hesitate to fly the red, white and blue. It belongs to all of us.

4 Comments

  1. ALLEN HIRSH on June 5, 2025 at 5:47 pm

    Great article Gene. Heartbreaking to think of the disdain the present regime has for that profound sacrifice.

  2. Dan E. Moldea on June 6, 2025 at 8:43 am

    Well said, as always, Gene-O.

  3. Carrie Cowherd on June 7, 2025 at 6:12 pm

    One place where freedom doesn’t ring is in DC. But that was to be expected.

  4. Amy Worden on June 7, 2025 at 7:44 pm

    Thank you Gene for again sharing that poignant D-Day piece and keeping alive the memory of the soldiers’ sacrifice.
    On Adas Israel, I wrote a piece for the Post when it became a museum (known as the Small Museum then) and the actually small synagogue’s future, once rocky and even rolling (!), looked secure at last. I did not know till I read your reflection the topic of the discussion that night.

Leave a Comment