French, Belgians see hope revived
But feelings on D-Day are mingled with fear for safety of relatives
Frenchmen, Belgians and Netherlanders now in New York – members of those nations whose homelands lie directly in the path of the invasion – learned yesterday of the Allied landings in Europe with mingled hope of victory, fear for their friends and families in the new battle zone, and relief that the long waiting had finally ended.
Many prayed at home or in their national churches. Some sang their patriotic songs. Some celebrated, drinking toasts to the invasion and the rapid liberation of their homes. Some speculated grimly on the battles still ahead.
At the French Canteen, 63 W 44th Street, the French Military Mission gave the news to André Czerwinski, the “concierge,” at 9:00 a.m. ET.
A member of the French Army in the last war, round, white-aproned M. André kept busy all morning announcing D-Day to men who came in for coffee or beer and sandwiches. Grouped about a large wall map of France, sailors and merchant seamen pointed out their towns, speculated about military advances, worried aloud about their families. At 9:30, a group of 30 sailors on their way out of New York stopped at the canteen, heard the word “invasion.” They broke into “La Marseillaise.”
Jan François and Marcellin Fiquet, officers of the French Merchant Marine, learned at the canteen that D-Day had come.
Said prayer, then beer
“I wondered if I should go to church,” François explained. “But I am too happy. I said a prayer here by myself and then we ordered beer.” As he talked, he took a hostess’ red hat, perched it on the back of his head, and began to sing “Les Bérets,” a song in praise of the girls in northern France. Marcellin Fiquet has not been home in four years. His wife and son are in Caen.
“They say the Allies are there today,” he said soberly.
Then he and Jan François clicked their beer mugs again, “au succès de l’invasion!”
At the Church of St. Vincent de Paul, 123 West 23rd Street, the Rev. Henry V. Hall said the 8:30 mass. Ignorant of the invasion, he was puzzled by the constant sound of feet as he faced the altar. As he turned toward the people halfway through the ceremony, he found the number of his congregation doubled.
So many worshipers bought six-day candles at the Church of Our Lady of Notre Dame, 40 Morningside Drive, early in the day that, later in the day, requests could not be met, said the Rev. Thomas J. Brown, the pastor.
In the Netherlands Club room of the Seamen’s Church Institute, one man said, “We’re glad it’s started. The beginning of the end. But how long will it take even yet?”
Diamond workers quit
Belgian relief organizations redoubled their work and business stopped in the diamond industry centers as workers clustered in whispering groups in W 47th Street. But many feared to discuss the news of the day with strangers, lest harm overtake their relatives at home.
Henri Fast of the Belgian Information Center, 630 5th Avenue, was at his telephone by 5:00 a.m., giving the news to his compatriots.
All morning, Belgians came into St. Albert’s Church, 433 W 47th Street, the only Belgian church in New York. A sobbing woman dabbed her eyes as she reached the vestry.
She said:
I just wound a kerchief about my head this morning. I didn’t even brush my hair this morning. I have a son in the Army. All I want to do today is pray.
At the Diamond Center, Inc., 15 E 47th Street, president Marcel Ginsburg, who in pre-Hitler days was president of the Beurs voor Diamanthandel in Antwerp, said all Belgian and Dutch workers observed a minute of silence at 11 o’clock.
He declared:
All business has stopped. They are praying and listening to the radio, thinking about their families abroad, and wondering where and how they are.
Aerial aerobatics a Nazi claim
London, England (AP) –
The German radio asserted today that German parachutists were used in combating Allied airborne troops even before they landed in France. These Nazi parachutists, the Germans said, “dropped onto Allied gliders and set them afire, as well as shooting their occupants.”