By Ann Minnett
“The story of one person is the story of humanity.”
~Paul Coelho
Earlier this month my husband and I walked the grounds of the American Cemetery in Normandy France where 9,387 American military dead are buried. Some sections were open to the public to stroll between the markers and perhaps find lost loved ones. Although we had no family members to locate, the memorials, the beautiful setting, and pristine white markers moved us to silence. Each headstone listed the man’s name (4 women were buried there), service rank, home state, and date of death. I lingered over a few markers, concentrating on each man’s name as I zigzagged through the maze. It felt wrong to skip even one, and that’s when the impossible task of honoring all of them overwhelmed me.

Plot D, Row 11, Grave 12
I headed toward the central path, and there was a cross bearing the name of Raymond F. Eggers, TEC 5, from Oklahoma. Both sides of my family come from Oklahoma. I was born there. The enormity of war and killing and dying settled onto the headstone of this one young man who died in France 72 years ago. The fact of his grave stone touched me far more deeply than the enormous maps depicting American and British divisions landing on the beaches or parachuting into the countryside behind German lines or even the regimented rows of gravestones stretching in all directions.
Later, on our way through pastoral Normandy toward a seaside village up the coast, it dawned on me why one stranger’s grave stood out among the enormity of the events memorialized in the vast cemetery.
I could relate to the personal story of one man. His background. The loss of him.
And isn’t this where good authors excel? For readers the grand story emerges in telling the ‘small’ moment of one individual.
Enjoy your Memorial Day. Let us be grateful for those who came before and for those we touch today.
What an insightful blog posting for Memorial Day. Thank you, Ann, for sharing your feelings with us.
Marie
Thank you, Marie.
Stunning piece…deeply moving. You put into words what I couldn’t express at a recent visit to Arlington. Beautifully written, Ann.
Beautifully said. We owe each of them our respect. Karen
Yes, we do. Thank you, Karen.
A lovely epigraph, Ann, and a lovely tribute to those lost in “the war to end all wars.”
Leslie
http://www.LeslieBudewitz.com
Thank you, Leslie.
Ann, I was in Normandy a few years ago, and the community hosted a big luncheon with speeches for my cruise passengers. I was touched, as you were, by their remembering, and their gratitude to the Americans who fought and died there, for them, for each one of them. Thanks for your nice story, Nan