When the 101st Airborne Saved Friend and Foe

During the first days of the D-Day Invasion, two American medics set up an aid station in a church, not knowing if they were in American or German held territory. Despite the raging battle, and with complete disregard for their own safety, they helped friend and foe alike.

This is their story.
StukaFoxsays...

I've been to this church in the Normandy countryside. It's remote, removed from the beaches, and from all outward appearances unremarkable. It's not until you walk in and realize how small it is inside, unlike the grandiosity of Notre Dame in Paris or Cathédrale Notre Dame in Reims: it's narrow and confined. How so many wounded soldiers fit in the little space is beyond me. I can't imagine the stone floor slicked with blood, the moans of pain, the smells of wounds. Even the pews seem too narrow to accommodate a human body laid lengthwise.

Even with all that said, if you stand inside that little church it's impossible not to feel the touch of history. Of everything I saw in Normandy, nothing made a bigger impression on my than the little church in Angoville-au-Plain.

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