[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 10, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H5195]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
70TH ANNIVERSARY OF D-DAY INVASION
(Mrs. DAVIS of California asked and was given permission to address
the House for 1 minute.)
Mrs. DAVIS of California. Mr. Speaker, last week, on June 6, I had
the honor of attending the 70th anniversary of the D-day invasion in
France. What a humbling experience it was to be there. Countless graves
marked the landscape where over 6,000 U.S. soldiers fought and died at
the site of one of the most significant military operations in modern
history.
Looking back, it is incredible--incredible that an operation as vast
and as complex as the Allied invasion of Normandy could ever succeed.
Just about everything that could go wrong did. We faced setbacks at
every turn, yet against all odds, our brave young men persevered.
Speaking with D-day veterans from San Diego like Jack Port, Joe
Reilly, Victor Kramer, and James Federhart, I was reminded that they
were just kids in 1944, many of them still teenagers.
I wish I could have shared it with my dad who served as a medic
throughout the war, but like so many of his brothers in arms, he did
not speak about his experience, and it is not hard to imagine why.
Many of their comrades never made it home. Thousands of U.S. soldiers
fought and died, so that the world might live in freedom and inherit
peace.
____________________