In the wake of the very moving commemorations of the D-Day landing of June 6th, 1944, I would like to highlight two aspects of memory which have come forth.
The first was expressed in the Houses of Worship essay, “God’s Place in D-Day’s Great Crusade” (Michael Snape, The Wall Street Journal, Friday, June 7th, 2024). Current-day cynicism and secularism have projected back an atmosphere of widespread religious indifference to the time of World War II. This is historical amnesia. That was not the reality of the time.
General Eisenhower’s order to the troops on the eve of D-Day “hailed the cross-channel invasion as a ‘Great Crusade’ and invoked ‘the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking’…”
And, “As news of the D-Day invasion spread, house of worship filled for services, perhaps ‘the greatest wave of mass intercession in history,’ as one magazine described it.”
“For our own generation, D-Day may seem to have scant connection with religion, beyond its lingering association with some terminology embarrassing to modern ears. Yet to many contemporaries, it marked a decisive moment in a life-or-death struggle between the JudeoChristian democracies of the West and the malignant pagan forces of Nazi Germany. The success of D-Day, like that of the Dunkirk evacuation four years earlier, was naturally and widely taken as providential.”
Also in The Wall Street Journal , there appeared on the 80th-anniversary day itself an essay about the 20th Anniversary documentary Dwight D. Eisenhower had done with Walter Cronkite, broadcast in June, 1964. (Rob Greene, “Ike Returns to Normandy”, June 6th, 2024.)
As described, Eisenhower is driving a jeep along the Normandy beach and he says to Cronkite: “You see these people out sailing in their pleasure boats, and you see them all along here. And the people have been swimming … taking advantage of the nice weather and the lovely beach. It is almost unreal to look at it today. There’s no smoke and fire and all the rest of it. It’s a wonderful thing. To remember this was what the fellows were fighting for, and sacrificing for. That these people could do this.”
For Eisenhower, to behold the ordinary pleasures of human life on a summer beach was a tangible fruit of victory. He knew how not to underestimate the value of the blessings of peace and the tranquility of order.
G.K. Chesterton once wrote:
“The end of all human endeavor is to be happy at home.” Let us not take for granted the blessings of such a post-war peace as we now still enjoy, 80 years on. And as we remember the war-dead and all of the veterans who returned but whose time is passing on, may we pray for wars to cease wherever they now rage around the globe, and may we pray with real fervor that petition we make after the Lord’s Prayer at Mass:
“Deliver us, Lord, we pray, from every evil, graciously grant peace in our days …”
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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