Sunday, June 5, 2011

Paris Question on the Eve of D-Day: Where is this Statue?


Paris never ceases to surprise me with new discoveries, from small details such as a carving on a fountain, to entire buildings I’ve never noticed before. This happened one morning last week, when I was stopped in my tracks by this statue, larger-than-life but almost alive. You could feel the willpower of this man by the steely look on his face, striding forward with absolute, unwavering determination. Tomorrow marks the 67th anniversary of the D-Day landings and a perfect opportunity to ask who this is this figure and where is stature in Paris?

Most of you will recognize the figure immediately – British Prime Minister Winston Churchill taken from a photograph of him striding down the Champs Elysee’s at the end of World War II. Who could miss his portly figure and look of steely commitment as he marches forward. Churchill’s immortal words are carved below: ‘We will never surrender.’


Churchill is one of the few foreigners to be commemorated in Paris, but few deserve it more. The statue is the work of sculptor Jean Cardot and was paid for by private donations of the French people. When it was erected, Cardot said: “I wanted to show Churchill’s strength, his determination, and also his humour. “This is a man on the move, a man who won’t stop.”

Where is the statue? In the gardens of The Champs Elysee’s, next to the Grand Palais at 1 Avenue General Eisenhower, one block from the Seine in the 8th arrondissement.

Winston Churchill’s words express all that I admire about the British, a nation that survived the darkest days of World War II, the Blitz, food shortages, material shortages and constant bombardment — after most of their allies had already surrendered — to fight on for their Country. In 1940, when an invasion by Nazi Germany seemed imminent, Winston Churchill gave one of the defining speeches of the second world war:

We shall go on to the end, we shall fight in France,
we shall fight on the seas and oceans,
we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our Island, whatever the cost may be,
we shall fight on the beaches,
we shall fight on the landing grounds,
we shall fight in the fields and in the streets,
we shall fight in the hills;
we shall never surrender

Churchill helped convince President Truman and the United States to enter the War and the rest is history. Two fascinating articles about June 6, 1944 can be found here: one from the BBC archives about D-Day and the other is the D-Day Experience from PBS.

Tomorrow marks the turning point of World War II, the D-Day Landings in Normandy. 5,000 boats sailed from England with 150,000 soldiers and almost 30,000 vehicles to Normandy, landing early on the morning of June 6 — the most massive, well-planned and secret invasion of the War. By the end of the day 9,000 Allied lives had been lost but 100,000 men made it ashore to fight on. The casualties among some troops were horrific: the American troops from Company A, mostly men from the small town of Bedford, Virginia lost 90 percent of their men. Their bravery and the bravery of thousands of others marked the turning point of the war.

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