The Germans take their positions
to defend the beach as Allied bombers buzz overhead, dropping their loads with
ear-splitting thunder. Staccato machine-gun fire reverberates as bright red
flashes of ignited black powder erupt from the muzzle of each weapon. At
water’s edge, Allied soldiers spill onto the beach in an unrelenting stream,
jumping from crater to crater, exploiting the foxholes which their bombers have
carved into the sand. The battle rages as Americans fall, Germans fall, but
slowly, slowly the Allies creep closer to the German line until it is, at long
last, overrun.
I sit on the side of the hill,
perhaps fifty yards from the corpse-strewn beach. Soldiers – the able-bodied,
the wounded and the dead – rise to appreciative applause. The crowd cheers as
the public address announcer declares that victory is ours. But I can’t bring
myself to cheer, thinking of the dead and wounded. After all this is war…or is
it?
No, it isn’t. This isn’t June
1944 on the beaches of Normandy, France, but August 2012 in Conneaut, Ohio, USA
on the tranquil coast of Lake Erie.
This is an annual event – “D-Day Conneaut” – in the quaint northern
Ohio town. In a recreation of Occupied France, re-enactors take on the roles of
American, British, Free Polish and German troops, French Resistance fighters,
Red Cross nurses, war correspondents and USO performers. I even encounter a
frisky guard dog – a German shepherd, of course – in the Axis “camp.”
The re-enacted battle is more real
to me than reading a soldier’s memoir or watching a war movie, however gruesome
and disturbing. I can actually feel the concussion of rifle fire against my
breastbone. I am almost certainly not going to experience an actual battle
first hand, but I’m sure this is the closest thing to it. The re-enactors take
their roles very seriously. The uniforms, weapons and machinery are accurate
down to rank insignia and battalion designations. Some men wear 1940’s style
wire-rimmed eyeglasses and the women style their hair in the fashion of the
time. As I walk amongst the re-enactors I ask some of them how deeply they
incorporate “the part” into their consciousness. To what extent do they believe
they have become actual participants in war, or are they conscious all along
that this is only role-playing? Do they think, even for a fleeting moment, that
their lives could be in danger? Do they feel as though they have been
transported to another place and time where they might die? I’ve heard that
actors embody their roles so intensely that the emotions of the characters come
through to the audience. I’ve never acted, but as a fiction writer, I delve as
deeply into my characters’ hearts and minds as I can so that their words come
through on the page and their emotions and actions ring true.
When I visit the American camp, I
inquire with fascination about the realism of the recreated battle. If they are
firing blanks, why the red flash as the shot resounds? I learn that results
from the ignition of paper at the discharge of the empty shell casing. I’m
impressed – it’s all quite convincing. I ask how they know they’ve been hit,
since blanks do not inflict pain. A re-enactor explains that they take turns
playing dead, though sometimes they merely give up; dressed in heavy wool
uniforms, in the heat of an August day, with thirty pounds of arms and
equipment on their backs, it is sometimes easier to just lie down and rest in
the sand. They feign death, content in the knowledge that although this battle
is over for them now, they’ll be plenty more in their futures as recreational
re-enactors.
I visit the German camp with keen
anticipation. I’ve read many memoirs of Wehrmacht soldiers and imagine meeting
a Guy Sajer, Johann Voss or Bruno Manz. (See my prior posts for their stories.)
Then I remind myself that this is not France 1944, but Ohio 2012, and any Axis
soldier I meet is likely to be an American with a passable German accent.
“Sprechen Sie Deutsch?” I ask one of them. “Klein” (small) he replies with a
timid smile. “Ein bisschen” (a little
bit), I correct gently. I meet another whose German is so much better than mine
I can barely hold up my end of the conversation. When I ask where he is from he
says, “Dortmund,” and I almost believe him. I speak to a man dressed in the uniform
of the Feldgendarmerie,
the military police. This group was amongst the most feared of the Axis forces,
even by their own countrymen, for enforcing draconian military laws on ordinary
German soldiers. They were known derogatively as “Heldenklauer”
(hero-snatchers) by other members of the German forces for arresting and
sometimes executing soldiers for the smallest infractions. He assures me that
members of the military police saved thousands of civilians from the Nazis. I’m
skeptical – I’ve never heard this story. But I thank him for the information
and promise to research it further. (Perhaps you’ll read a future post about
that here!)
A range of questions swarm my
brain as I walk from camp to camp. What must it feel like to play “the bad
guys,” as one spectator refers to the Axis troops? And for those playing
members of the victorious Allied forces, the embodiment of our beloved and
honored “Greatest Generation” – do they do this for nostalgia or entertainment,
as a hobby or as a patriotic tribute?
Perhaps the most moving scene
comes as we sit on the hillside at Conneaut beach, waiting for the battle to
begin. A small white van arrives with a contingent of elderly men, actual
veterans of the Second World War. The spectators rise and cheer and some wave
small American flags. I applaud too. In fact, if my own father were alive today
he might be among them, having served in the US Army in the Pacific Theater of
Operations. But with my applause comes sorrow for those lost on both sides of
the battlefield. My hope is that this remembrance of war and its terrible
consequences will renew our commitment to peace.
Germans prepare to defend
the beach. Note the spectators in the foreground and background.
The Allies land on the shores
of Normandy,
and take their positions
as they face the German lines.
Under a pall of smoke, the
battle is nearly over: dead Germans on the right, advancing Allies on the left,
and spectators in the background.
Interior of a tent in the Allied camp
“Sprechen Sie Deutsch?”
Note: All photos are courtesy of
Jonathan Foise from D-Day Conneaut 2012.