Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (2024)

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People are also reading… 50 facts and figures about D-Day 50 facts and figures about D-Day It was the largest amphibious assault in history The ‘D’ in D-Day is redundant Secrecy and deception were key The practice run turned deadly German defenses were the war’s biggest construction project Forces landed on five code-named beaches Omaha Beach was the hardest fought A massive bombardment preceded the invasion Thousands of paratroopers landed first Canadian forces captured the most ground The operation had a code name D-Day involved nearly 7,000 Allied ships... …and more than 11,500 Allied aircraft There were 73,000 Americans at D-Day Comanche ‘code-talkers’ joined the siege The Allies faced 50,000 German defenders The battle lasted until August The exact number of fallen is unknown Most Allied troops arrived after D-Day The operation led to the liberation of Paris A memorial cemetery sits on US soil in France Families fought—and died—together Around 14,000 corpses were returned home The Allies lost more than 11% of their troops German casualties exceeded 240,000 The action was far from consistent The tide was a double-edged sword The beach was a minefield D-Day was the result of trial and error The Germans almost guessed it right It was supposed to happen a month earlier Nature played a key role Higgins boats whisked many troops to shore D-Day films have become part of American popular culture A D-Day movie star served on D-Day Many other famous people served on D-Day Gargantuan supply shipments preceded the invasion 17 million maps were needed The landings opened a supply line Artificial harbors supported the supply lines The Army attacked with 6 divisions 500 gliders took to the air A separate battle raged high above the beach The mighty Atlantic Wall fell in a day The day produced 12 Medals of Honor Heavy packs encumbered troops Boat ramps served as shields One African American combat unit participated That unit’s medic is an unsung hero Germany surrendered less than one year later Be the first to know References

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (1)

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  • DANICA KIRKA Associated Press
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  • 4 min to read

  • PA Media - News

On June 6, 1944, more than 150,000 troops from the US, UK, Canada and other Allies took part in the largest air, land and sea assault in history: D-Day. Here is a look at the significance of the Allied invasion of Europe for the rest of the Second World War.

LONDON — Even as he prepared to embark for the battlefields of Normandy, Pvt. Mervyn Kersh was summoned by his commanding officer and threatened with arrest.

Why, the officer demanded, had Kersh refused to eat his army rations of canned beef and vegetables, subsisting only on canned peaches? Was he trying to make himself so weak that he would be unfit to fight in France?

Kersh, then 19, was indignant.

“I said that was the last thing I wanted to do,’’ Kersh said. “I’m Jewish. I didn’t eat anything that wasn’t kosher as far as I could help it.’’

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (2)

The officer dropped the charge and Kersh was soon on board a landing ship approaching the Normandy coast with artillery shells from Allied ships and German shore batteries screaming overhead. The sense of adventure turned to fear, Kersh recalled, and he sought comfort from a pocket edition of “The Book of Psalms” before landing in France a few days after D-Day, which was on June 6, 1944.

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Kersh is returning to France this week for ceremonies markingthe 80th anniversary of the D-Day landingsand the Battle of Normandy that followed. It's expected to be one of the last big events commemorating the campaign to end the Nazis’ grip on Northern Europe, with the dwindling number of surviving veterans now approaching or past their 100th birthdays.

Growing up in a Jewish family in south London during the 1930s and '40s, Kersh, now 99, was doubly motivated to defeat Adolf Hitler. In addition to the threat to Britain and the bombing that killed almost 30,000 people in the capital, there was the knowledge that the Nazis were slaughtering Jews across Europe.

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (3)

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (4)

“I could almost say it was a crusade, if that’s not the wrong word,” Kersh said. “To me, this had a purpose. It wasn’t just a game or passing the time. … It was to put the Germans out of action as long as possible.”

“We knew what was happening. (We) didn’t know the extent of it, but we knew they had gas chambers. They were killing people, shooting them, hanging them.”

That motivation translated into an above average level of military service for British Jews during World War II. About 70,000 Jews, or 18% of the Jewish population, served in the U.K. armed forces during the war, compared with 11% for the population as a whole.

Both Britain and the U.S. benefited from large Jewish populations that were highly motivated to defeat Nazi Germany and provided a pool of recruits who had valuable language skills and other knowledge that the Allies needed for the war effort, said Rob Citino, a retired senior historian at The National WWII Museum in New Orleans.

Henry Kissinger, for example, was born in Germany, fled to London with his family, then moved to New York where he was drafted into the U.S. Army. Kissinger served in counterintelligence during the advance into Germany, helping to arrest saboteurs and Gestapo secret police operatives.

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (5)

“If there’s ever a soldier who is going to fight with spirit in the field against the Nazis, of course it would be a Jewish-American or an Anglo Jewish citizen of the British Isles,” Citino said.

Assigned to the Royal Army Ordnance Corps, Kersh’s role in the invasion was to help ensure a steady flow of vehicles — everything from motorcycles to 48-wheel tank transporters — to British Army units fighting their way to Berlin.

Advancing across Europe, he saw for himself what the war had meant for Jews.

There were the people in Bayeux, France, who came out of hiding to hear a rabbi deliver a service for Jewish troops, and in Brussels, two black-hatted men told Kersh how they had spent four years in one tiny room, surviving on the meager rations a neighbor shared with them.

But it was at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp that he saw the true horrors of the war. British troops liberated the camp on April 15, 1945, finding 60,000 starving prisoners and thousands of unburied bodies.

When Kersh arrived in the area a few weeks later to await a transfer, he visited the camp. He wasn’t allowed to enter because of the danger of typhus, but outside the gates he met skeleton-like former prisoners still wearing their striped prison uniforms.

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (6)

Kersh tried to help, collecting chocolate rations from other soldiers and passing them onto the survivors whose eyes lit up at the sight of food they hadn’t seen for years. But that act of kindness makes him pause almost 80 years later.

“I found out afterwards that that was the worst thing you could give starving people,” he said. “How many died from that? I don’t know. But I didn’t know it at the time.’’

After his years in the army, including a stint in Egypt after the war, Kersh found his dream of becoming a retail store manager blocked by employers who thought he was too old to join a training program at the age of 22. He ultimately found success pioneering the market for fake fur coats and as a writer.

But in recent years, his vocation has become visiting schools and community groups to tell his story, reminding younger generations about the dangers of antisemitism and what can happen if world leaders don’t stand up to tyrants.

The French government in 2015 awarded Kersh the Legion d’Honneur, the country’s highest order of merit, for his participation in the Normandy campaign. And five years later, then U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson honored Kersh for his “tireless efforts” to reach out to young people.

Eight decades after he rolled onto Gold Beach in a tracked personnel carrier, Kersh is the first to admit that he had an easier path than the men who splashed through the surf facing a fusillade of gunfire and mortar shells in the days before him. And he recognizes that he is being feted in part because he’s one of the last men standing from the campaign to liberate Europe.

But that makes it all the more important to him to tell the story.

“When I go back, each time I go back, and look at the military cemeteries, I just think how lucky I am, because I’ve got the choice of going home again," he said. "And they haven’t. They just lost their lives, but it was for something worthwhile, if that’s any compensation."

50 facts and figures about D-Day

50 facts and figures about D-Day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (7)

It was the largest amphibious assault in history

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (9)

The ‘D’ in D-Day is redundant

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (10)

Secrecy and deception were key

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (11)

The practice run turned deadly

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (12)

German defenses were the war’s biggest construction project

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (13)

Forces landed on five code-named beaches

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (14)

Omaha Beach was the hardest fought

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (15)

A massive bombardment preceded the invasion

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (16)

Thousands of paratroopers landed first

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (17)

Canadian forces captured the most ground

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (18)

The operation had a code name

D-Day involved nearly 7,000 Allied ships...

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (20)

…and more than 11,500 Allied aircraft

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (21)

There were 73,000 Americans at D-Day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (22)

Comanche ‘code-talkers’ joined the siege

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (23)

The Allies faced 50,000 German defenders

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (24)

The battle lasted until August

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (25)

The exact number of fallen is unknown

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (26)

Most Allied troops arrived after D-Day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (27)

The operation led to the liberation of Paris

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (28)

A memorial cemetery sits on US soil in France

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (29)

Families fought—and died—together

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (30)

Around 14,000 corpses were returned home

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (31)

The Allies lost more than 11% of their troops

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (32)

German casualties exceeded 240,000

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (33)

The action was far from consistent

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (34)

The tide was a double-edged sword

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (35)

The beach was a minefield

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (36)

D-Day was the result of trial and error

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (37)

The Germans almost guessed it right

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (38)

It was supposed to happen a month earlier

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (39)

Nature played a key role

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (40)

Higgins boats whisked many troops to shore

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (41)

D-Day films have become part of American popular culture

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (42)

A D-Day movie star served on D-Day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (43)

Many other famous people served on D-Day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (44)

Gargantuan supply shipments preceded the invasion

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (45)

17 million maps were needed

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (46)

The landings opened a supply line

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (47)

Artificial harbors supported the supply lines

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (48)

The Army attacked with 6 divisions

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (49)

500 gliders took to the air

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (50)

A separate battle raged high above the beach

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (51)

The mighty Atlantic Wall fell in a day

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (52)

The day produced 12 Medals of Honor

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (53)

Heavy packs encumbered troops

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (54)

Boat ramps served as shields

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (55)

One African American combat unit participated

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (56)

That unit’s medic is an unsung hero

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (57)

Germany surrendered less than one year later

Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (58)

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Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day landings (2024)

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