Letter to Leo
Dear
Leo,
We never
met. We were not friends nor family. Yet we find ourselves at your grave
every so often. We do not know a lot about you. We know your name, we
know you were born in 1920 and you lived in Massachusetts.
You were a son, maybe a brother, father or husband. You were the boy
next door. The all American boy with hopes and dreams of a bright
future. A career, a family and a house with a white fence. With a name as
Leo Murphy, you are not destined to do great things. You will likely
not become president or a movie star. However you would become a hero.
You were draftted into the US army and served as a Sergeant in the 314th
Infantry Regiment, 79th Infantry Division. During the second world war you came
tot Europe to fight for our freedom. You died on a French battlefield on July
7, 1944 at the age of 24.
Your grave is one of the 9.387 graves at the American cemetery at
Colleville-sur-Mer. 9.387 graves marked with marble crosses perfectly
alligned with military precision, row after row after row. Graves of young
American soldiers like you, on who's shoulders once the freedom of the world
rested. These graves are the silent witnesses to the atrocities of the second
world war and especially to the bloodshed at Omaha Beach during operation
Overlord, the invasion by the Allied forces of the beaches of Normandy in
1944. The beginning of the liberation of Europa at the end of world war
II.
The awarding of a Purple Heart and Bronze Star Medal is a testimony
to your courage and heroism. You gave your life for our freedom. Young men
should not die in a war, war should not exist. But war has existed just as long
as mankind has. And it will always exist. As Plato said : 'only the dead have
seen the end of war'.
Now with the world back on fire, there is only one truth. That of the freedom
of all people, regardless of colour, faith or opinion : freedom of
speech, freedom of religion - to believe in the God we choose or the right not
to believe. The right to choose at all.
Visiting your grave every year, gives me hope. Hope that things can change,
that every war can end. That the darkest of night will
always be followed by the brightest of days.
When I will be too old to travel to Normandy, I will ask my
granddaughters to lay flowers on your grave. They will continue our
tradition. It is upto us the living ones and the future generations to
never forget. To remember you and your brothers in arms. To remember
those who fell and those who survived the hell of war.
Leo, thank you from the bottom of my heart for the sacrifice you made. Thanks
to thousands of young soldiers in a heroic battle, Europe was liberated.
May you have found eternal peace in the fields once marked by bloodshed, in the
oasis of the cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach.
You are my hero. I will never forget you.
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