COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, France — World War II veterans from the United States, Britain and Canada are in Normandy this week to mark 80 years since the D-Day landings that helped lead to Hitler’s defeat.
Few witnesses remain who remember the Allied assault. The Associated Press is speaking to veterans about their role in freeing Europe from the Nazis, and their messages for younger generations.
PAPA JAKE
''I am the luckiest man in the world,'' D-Day veteran Jake Larson, a 101-year-old American best known on social media under the name ''Papa Jake,'' said as he arrived in Normandy this week. Papa Jake has more than 800,000 followers on TikTok.
Born in Owatonna, Minnesota, Larson enlisted in the National Guard in 1938, lying about his age as he was only 15.
In 1941, his guard unit was transferred into federal service and he officially joined the Army. In January 1942, he was sent overseas and assembled the planning books for Operation Overlord.
He landed on Omaha Beach in 1944, where he ran under machine-gun fire and made it to the cliffs without being wounded.
After the landing, Larson remembers that he slept close to a comrade who had put his rifle by their side. ''In the morning, when we got up, he picked up his rifle from my litter where I was going to sleep and it fell in two. A piece of shrapnel came down and hit the rifle and broke it in two,'' he said.