On June 6th world leaders, international partners, and a dwindling fraternity of centenarian veterans gathered across the quiet beaches of northern France to mark the 82nd anniversary of the historic D-Day landings that took place in 1944.
The poignant internation ceremonies – headlined by an official service in the seaside town of Langrune-sur-Mer near Sword Beach honoured the 156,000 Allied troops who launched the bloody but pivotal seaborne invasion to liberate Europe.
For the few surviving veterans traveling with the Royal British Legion veteran charities, the milestone brought emotional reflections on the heavy price paid for peace. At the British Normandy Memorial in Ver-sur-Mer, attendees observed a solemn minute of silence among the stones, which now feature nearly 100 newly added names of fallen service members.
Across the Channel, the UK kept pace with events at The National Memorial Arboretum where descendants and bereaved families laid wreathes alongside local standard-bearers. Political leaders used the moment to stress the duty of remembering as the World War Two generation fades from living memory.
At the Bayeux War Cemetery, French and British school children stood shoulder- to -shoulder with dignitaries for a joint service designed to hand the torch of remembrance over to the younger generation. The unified message from Normandy remained resolute: though eight decades have passed, the world will never forget the legacy of June 6, 1944.
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