Sunday, June 6, 2010

June 6, 1944

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D-Day celebrated in June 6 1944 is now celebrated today. D-Day June 6 1944 is the day when the greatest armada of ships and men laid siege to the beaches of France, in an invasion that would put an end to the Nazi conquest of Europe. Charles Rivkin, the U.S. ambassador to France, praised the memory of the fallen Allied soldiers on D-Day 6 June 1944 in Normandy. He also stressed “the unbreakable friendship between France and the United States for over 200 years.” Twenty veterans attended the ceremony in the heart of Sainte-Marie-du-Mont (Utah Beach).

D-day, with the former engineer and MOTOC pilot in various sports disciplines motorcycle old motorcycle enthusiast Bernard Goulet has restored a BSA M20 and a Harley WL military. With him and his two bikes, we went to stroll along some of the landing sites.

I am not making it in the street Maginot Luc sur Mer (14) Calvados we expect that morning, parked fully in line, two motorcycles authentic allied forces. Two of those who landed from the June 6, 1944 specifically on most beaches of Calvados and the North East of La Manche (D-Day June 6 1944).

For history buffs, here landed the most formidable armada ever mechanical implementation since the wars exist. To the uneducated it is clear that the stakes were, first to end the extreme Nazi barbarism and then not let the Soviet troops, allied to a time, continuing their offensive too far west . Let us return to our bikes. D-Day June 6 1944 means the end of Nazi in Europe.

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