May 8th is VE Day here in
Europe, marking the day of Germany’s unconditional surrender in WWII, in 1945.
It’s a national holiday here in France and what I find most touching is that
villages across the nation celebrate those soldiers who gave their lives in the
wars.
(November 11th, Armistice Day, is when WWI’s end is
celebrated, however, often villages remember the dead from all recent wars on
each day.)
While I can’t speak for all of France’s
regions, here the townspeople follow the maire
(mayor) up to the village’s cemetery and, with much ceremony, the name of each
person from that village who died in the wars, is read off, followed by a
chorus of “Mort pour la France,” died for France. It’s incredibly moving, even
if you’re someone like me who, because my parents lived through WWII in
Ireland, which managed to remain neutral, has not been directly touched by
these wars.
As time passes, fewer people remain who
feel that connection and so the crowds of participants inevitably grow older
and wane, until they are either unable to attend or are gone from us
altogether. It is rare these days to see anyone in attendance who isn’t
retired.
Time heals wounds and blurs memories, until
it’s easier to forget than to remember. Some argue it’s best to just put these
incidents behind us, but I think they miss the point that the celebration isn’t
to remember the horrors of the wars—and WWII in particular is a painful memory
for France—but to remember the existence of each individual who fought for
their country and laid down their life so that the rest of us might live in
liberty. How different our lives might have been, had they not made the
ultimate sacrifice.
I started this blog five years ago after
attending this very celebration, just a couple of months before settling here
in central France, and I’m struck by just how fast those five years have gone,
how often the pace of life overtakes us, and how typically it’s all we can do to keep up with
the day’s happenings. (And the pace of mine is admittedly nowhere near what it was when I
was living in the US.) I, too, have fallen short of my good intentions to
keep family and friends updated here on what’s been happening because I’ve been
so wrapped up in work, travel, life in general, and the endless quest to get
this ancient house upgraded.
If I’m not careful, the epitaph on this
blog’s tombstone is going to read, “Mort pour la France.”
2 comments:
Greetings! Good to "see" you again.
Thanks, Debbie, it's good to be back. I was in Portugal for more than three months and never had a minute to myself except for work so I'm really behind. Hope to catch up soon!
Post a Comment