12 September 2013

History for the day

In the long, cruel struggle of World War Two, opportunities for jubilation were scarce. But even among the era’s handful of “wish you were there” moments— the American victory in the Battle of Midway, just six months after Pearl Harbor; Russian and American troops meeting at Germany’s River Elbe in April of 1945; VJ Day in Times Square in New York City— for sheer, cathartic elation, none surpassed the liberation of Paris. The capital was ultimately freed, on 24 and 25 August 1944, by a combination of troops from the Second French Armored Division, granted precedence by Eisenhower in his role as Supreme Allied Commander; resistance fighters of many nationalities, who had been battling the Germans in and around Paris for years; and Americans, primarily from the Fourth Infantry Division.
Life photographer Ralph Morse, now 94 years old, recalls being outside Paris in a press camp— he was covering George Patton’s Third Army and its sweep toward the Rhine for Life  when, he says, Ernest Hemingway, who was also in the camp, offered a suggestion. “I knew Hemingway pretty well because his wife, Mary, had worked for Life  and she had reported with me on a few stories,” Morse told Life.com. “So, we’re in this camp, waiting, and Hemingway says: ‘You know, the Germans can’t possibly have mined every road into Paris. Why don’t we find a back road? We can be at the Champs-Élysées before the troops get there.’ Of course, we did make it into Paris… but not the way Hemingway wanted.”
Hemingway’s plan,” Morse recalls, “to get into Paris before US troops headed in was scuttled because someone— maybe a reporter who wasn’t invited along, who knows?— someone leaked the plan to Patton, and before we knew it, the press camp was surrounded by military police. Patton walks in and says, ‘If any of you make a move toward Paris before the troops do, I’ll court martial you!’ Anyway, we went in shortly afterward. It was a quick trip from the outskirts, because there were so few Germans left to stop us.”
Strikes in Paris— by railway workers, cops, postal workers— and a relentless guerrilla resistance had shown that the Germans’ hold on the city was tenuous, at best. When word spread that the Nazi military garrison in the capital had surrendered, the streets erupted (photo). Wine flowed. People laughed, sang La Marseillaise, wept.
“It was an amazing sight, an amazing feeling,” Morse recalls. “So many people in the streets, holding hands, everyone headed for the Champs-Élysées and the Arc de Triomphe, the same way that everyone in New York City heads to Times Square, for example, when something momentous happens. It really was… well, liberating.”
“One thing that really stands out,” Morse recalls of those indelible days in Paris more than six decades ago, “is the feeling of certainty in the air. Everyone knew it was over. And I don’t mean the battle for Paris. I mean the war. We all knew there was a lot of fighting left. The Battle of the Bulge a few months later proved that, and who knew what was going to happen in the Pacific? But when the Germans surrendered Paris, we all sensed it was now only a matter of time, and not much time, before we took Berlin.”

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