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Machine guns firing from the slopes. Barbed wires with mines buried underneath. V-shaped
 ditches.           The love of freedom.



    These were the three most visible features that stood out at the coastline of Normandy, a coastal      The love of freedom, and to a lesser extent, the love of their countries, drive the Greatest
 region in Northern France. Sailing towards them were more than 100,000 soldiers in their body armour,   Generation towards throwing their own bodies on the beach, to an unseen enemy, while facing uncertain
 contemplating if they would even land on the beach that would soon be rained with fire and bullets. What   outcomes. It is their devotion to an idea far above and beyond their own comprehension that propelled
 complicated the whole landing operation was none other than the unpredictable tidal waves, so rough   them to march on the beach, despite knowing that their chances of survival were slim. It is precisely this

 that some of the soldiers even started to develop sea-sickness. On top of that, these brave men and women   love that never falters, this love that pays the prices would ultimately make undaunted the final sacrifice
 would have to dodge the floating mines offshore.  for their loved ones, their country, and the freedom to live life as they deem fit, even though they can
            choose not to put their lives on the table.

    And yet, they got on.
                    As the Mandarin proverb says, “The success of a single general is built atop of thousands of
    While they inched closer to the beach, they started to hear bullets hitting off the ramp of their   withered bones.” Whenever people spoke of Normandy landing, praises were showered unto the main
 ships. “Now that I'm actually here, I see that my chance of my returning to all of you are quite slim”,   architect of Operation Overlord - General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Nonetheless, the posterities have
 noted 2nd Lt. Jack Lundberg Lead a, U.S. Air Force, from Woods Cross, Utah. Before they even stepped   often overlooked the enormous sacrifices made by the Greatest Generation on 6th of June. Without

 foot on the beach, with waters as deep as their heads, some of their vessels were engulfed in flames, some   their undaunting sacrifices, the history we know of today would be very different, and the many former
 writhed in pain, others were inundated with the icy cold sea water, only to be found floating on the waters,   British colonies including our dear nation might remain under the claws of yet another German-speaking
 unconscious. Yet, most of them courageously marched onto the beach, throwing themselves towards the   colonial master.

 unseen members of the Wehrmacht, as if the zombie apocalypse had befallen them.
                    Upon receiving the Medal of Honour for his heroic actions on Normandy beaches, Walter Ehlers
    However, the fiercest battle of all took place at Omaha Beach, a codename assigned to a tiny   remarked: “While we braved these then-fortified beaches to beat back Hitler and to liberate Europe,
 segment of the otherwise enormous coastline in Normandy region. Most of the soldiers were soaked   we fought for much more than that. We fought to preserve what our forefathers had died for to  protect
 in the ocean that was oozing with blood and corpses before they even stepped foot on the beach.   our faith, to preserve our liberty. I pray that the price we paid on this beach will never be mortgaged,

 Only a mere 600 Allied soldiers had successfully done so, after hours of amphibious assault and air   that my grandsons and granddaughters will never face the terror and horror that we faced here. But they
 bombardment. George Allen, one of the soldiers who fought in this bloody battle, recounted “All I   must know that without freedom, there is no life and, that the things most worth living for, may
 remember is mayhem--dead bodies floating in the water, busted equipment.” He added: “We lost a lot   sometimes demand dying for.”

 of good men that day.”
                    As enunciated by John Philpot Curran, “The condition upon which God hath given liberty

    The significance of their audacity could not be fully appreciated at that moment. Dubbed “D-Day”  to man is eternal vigilance.” In an enormous effort to safeguard their freedom, the veterans of D-Day
 by the historians, it was only few months into this battle then only it dawned to people across the world   fought valiantly in doing so. To them, this is the thing that is most worth living for, and it indeed, on this
 that D-Day had paved a way for the eventual demise of the Nazi Germany's reign of terror. But if not for   occasion, demands dying for. As we live our relatively peaceful lives today, may we always remember that

 their bravery, the entire world would have been subjugated by the German-speaking overlords.   this peace and prosperity come with a hefty price which our forefathers who have no relations to us have
 However, one cannot help but to wonder - what drives these people, who have no premonition of the   paid for us, on that bloody beach around eighty years ago.
 outcome of the war, get no assurance for their safety, know not if their heroism would be rewarded, be so

 willing to sacrifice their own lives to fight a war that they might not even emerge victorious?








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