R 357 |
2024 -- S 3140 Enacted 06/06/2024 |
S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N |
MEMORIALIZING AND COMMEMORATING THE 80TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE D-DAY LANDINGS IN NORMANDY, FRANCE, AND THE EVENTUAL LIBERATION OF EUROPE |
Introduced By: Senators Felag, Raptakis, F. Lombardi, Ciccone, DiPalma, Britto, Sosnowski, and Miller |
Date Introduced: June 05, 2024 |
WHEREAS, On June 6, 1944, 156,000 courageous young American, British and |
Canadian troops began the liberation of Europe when they landed on the beaches in Normandy, |
France, that now live forever in history. They were code-named Gold Beach, Juno Beach, Sword |
Beach, Utah Beach, and most famously, Omaha Beach, where American soldiers faced a |
cauldron of withering enemy fire, deep water, choppy waves, and suffered enormous casualties |
before eventually prevailing and breaching General Rommel’s “Atlantic Wall”; and |
WHEREAS, Additionally, during the night before the fateful invasion, thousands of |
heroic airborne troops, including the vaunted American 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, were |
dropped from the sky behind enemy lines across the Normandy region in order to secure vital |
objectives. They too suffered casualties on the day we now call “The Longest Day”; and |
WHEREAS, Before the Allied Invasion of France, Europe had suffered through the |
darkest four-year period in its history. Hitler’s Nazi armies had conquered and enslaved Norway, |
Belgium, France, Poland, Greece, the Netherlands, Denmark, Czechoslovakia and the former |
Yugoslavia. At the same time, the Nazis were ruthlessly murdering six million Jews and countless |
others in the death camps they ran throughout Europe; and |
WHEREAS, The D-Day Normandy landing was also the largest amphibious assault in |
world history, and included 5,000 ships and 11,000 aircraft sorties flown by allied pilots. It was |
simply the most important military operation in world history and if it had failed, unimaginable |
consequences would have followed. The war in Europe would certainly have lasted much longer |
than its ending in May of 1945, even more people would have perished in the death camps, and |
democracy might have permanently died in Europe either through a forced negotiated truce with |
the Nazis or to a conquering Russian Army, instead of the liberating forces of the American, |
British and Canadian armies that freed Western Europe in 1945; and |
WHEREAS, On the fateful day, thousands of brave American and Allied soldiers, most |
of them surely terrified of what might have awaited them, risked everything to free Europe from |
the clutches of the evil Nazi regime, and to preserve and protect all the freedoms we cherish |
today. Thanks to the efforts of these men, many of whom perished, today Europe enjoys the kind |
of freedom and prosperity that was unimaginable 80 years ago, and America remains the most |
free nation on Earth; now, therefore be it |
RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island hereby memorializes and |
commemorates the 80th Anniversary of the D-Day landings on Normandy, on June 6, 2024. May |
we never forget the sacrifices made by so many courageous young American and Allied soldiers |
in support of the noble causes of freedom and liberty; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to the Rhode Island Adjutant General, Major |
General Christopher P. Callahan. |
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LC006198 |
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