blog stats

David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > View of Dieppe beach from the German gun positions. The truth is that Stalin was threatening to sue for peace with Hitler on the verge of taking Moscow, Stalingrad, and Leningrad. 
Not only that but Roosevelt did not like Churchill's plan to go to North Africa first. He wanted to take on Hitler in France right away. 

Churchill gave Mountbatten the job of mounting a mini invasion.... AND PROVE IT COULD NOT BE DONE YET.  (source Gen. Denis Whitaker in his book Dieppe Tragedy to Triumph) 

So the bombing of the guns by Bomber Harris was called off at the last minute, no battle ship was sent to provide fire support and the Canadians were slaughtered.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Sunset Of Lives 

This is the Canadian Cemetery at Juno Beach. Canadians provided 1 in 5 of all the troops landed on D-Day.  So many of the dates on the headstones were June 6,1944.

These Canadians did this for us all, and paid with their lives.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > As I walked through the Canadian cemetery that day, I realized I was the only Canadian alive among the seven hundred and eighty there around me.  Row after row of them lay silently under the perfectly
manicured lawn and gardens.  Incongruously a small dog followed me, eager to play, nipping at my
sandled toes, oblivious to the folly of men. 

I read the inscriptions beneath the maple leaf on each stone.  Messages of hope in the afterlife, records of
heroism, and one compelling request: "He sleeps beside his comrades. His Grave I may never see. May
some kind hand place a flower for me."  I found a flower and with tears in my eyes, did as I was asked.  

I did not notice the approach of a man about my age and two women. One of the women was in her late
seventies.  They saw me looking intently at the grave.

"Bonjour, le connaissez vous?

"Non" I said, pointing to the inscription.  He nodded. "Ah oui. We wonder..we bring ma mÞre to visit her
first loves tomb."

"She was Canadian, from Quebec before the war. After the war she moved here so she could be near
him." 

"Mon nom est David." I said

" Je m'appelle Nicholas, over there is my wife and my mother. You have come a long way to visit a
cemetery in which you know no one."

"Oui, Dieppe est trÞs important pour les Canadiens" 

Between his "terrible English" and my questions in "mauvais Franþaise", he told his mother's story.  She
had fallen in love with a Canadian soldier.  He had written to her every day describing his life in England.
Then the letters stopped.  His last letter was dated August 17, 1942.  A few weeks later the telegram
arrived at his family home "We regret to inform you...". 

After the war, she emigrated to France. One day in this cemetery she met a French soldier come to pay
his respects to the Canadians who had given their lives to free his country.  He had escaped France at the
Dunkerque evacuation.  They talked until the sun had set and he asked if he could drive her home.  A
year later they were married.  

"That was my father." Nicholas said "He died last year." 

I was reminded of a passage in the Bible.  
"As for man, his days are like grass, he flourishes like a flower of the field; the wind blows over it and it
is gone, and its place remembers it no more."  

Nicholas asked, why had I come to France? I could have answered that I had been fascinated by WW II
since I was a teenager, but at that moment I realized there was more to it than curiosity.  I told him that I
didn't know  -yet.  With that we parted, four people connected by a cemetery.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Juno Beach
Time seemed suspended. I had an uncanny feeling I had been here before. I walked the beach, watching as the tide took the water half a kilometre out. This beach was so familiar; but nothing beyond it. At some point I turned and walked back towards the houses lining the beach, some looking just like they had prior to the invasion.

The beach storage houses are a modern addition... you can rent one for the summer.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Over the next few days, I visited the other invasion beaches.  At Arromanches the skeletal remains of the artificial  "Mulberry Harbour"* , still surrounds the bay.

*An artificial harbour made by sinking giant hollow concrete "caissons" and surplus ships. used to make up for the lack of natural harbours in Normandy
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Crystal Dream

I am standing (shivering on my skis) about 200 m from the main gondola lift of Mont. Tremblant Ski Resort about 150 km North of Montreal Quebec. The temperature is about -35C and the air is filled with ice crystal fog. You can just make out the ski run called Le Edge starting at the top of the peak on the left.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Shadows Taking Flight
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Making Baby Picnic Tables
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Bridge Over Untroubled Waters. Naples
Sunset Of Lives

This is the Canadian Cemetery at Juno Beach. Canadians provided 1 in 5 of all the troops landed on D-Day. So many of the dates on the headstones were June 6,1944.

These Canadians did this for us all, and paid with their lives.
David Cale (ImagesOfTheJourney) > Sunset Of Lives 

This is the Canadian Cemetery at Juno Beach. Canadians provided 1 in 5 of all the troops landed on D-Day.  So many of the dates on the headstones were June 6,1944.

These Canadians did this for us all, and paid with their lives.
Sunset Of Lives

This is the Canadian Cemetery at Juno Beach. Canadians provided 1 in 5 of all the troops landed on D-Day. So many of the dates on the headstones were June 6,1944.

These Canadians did this for us all, and paid with their lives.
See photo in original gallery.

Comments

|

New comment:

Name: Email: Link:


To foil spammers, enter this code: copy this text in this box: Code unreadable?

Add Comment Cancel


This site and my photography business have developed from a passion for wonder, for wandering and for story telling. In the past few years I have traveled to more than 700 cities and places in pursuit of wonders from which come my stories and photographs.

IMAGES OF THE JOURNEY PHOTOGRAPHY


High quality photographs that capture the essence of exotic travel which will bring that blank wall in your office or home to life. Photo gifts, calendars, clothing, are also available.
We are located about 20km (12mi) NW of the Toronto International Airport in the city of Brampton, Ontario, Canada.
My services include travel photojournalism, political or commercial event photography (no weddings).If you are in the home decorating business then call for wholesale pricing. Images or stories on this site may not be used for personal or commercial use without written permission or purchase from this site.
NOTE Many charitable or non profit organizations (NGOs) will be eligible to use these photos, or my services for NO FEE (expenses only) Contact me at david@imagesofthejourney.com or 416-890-0740.

copyright 1996-2009 David Cale [Images Of The Journey Photography] All Rights Reserved