Deb sent me to McDonalds to grab lunch for us today. As I was leaving with our Big Macs and fries, an older gentleman wearing a WWII Veteran hat held the door open for a couple women leaving in front of me. He continued holding the door open for me....but I montioned him to come on in. As I do whenever I encounter someone who is a veteran of the armed forces, or who is currently serving, I gave him a salute and told him "Thank You". I shook his hand as I told him that his generation defeated the greatest evil the human race had ever faced. He looked at me as said "We lost a lot of men. We lost 58 bombers that day....that's over 580 lives lost." As he was saying this, his eyes glassed over with held back tears. Then he stood a bit straighter, his eyes hardened as his mind returned to that long ago day, and he said "But we got the job done." Then he said one word that stood out among all the rest. Ploiesti.
At that moment, I realized that I was talking to a man who was on the mission that was later to be called "Black Sunday". One hundred and seventy seven B-24s departed Lybia, carrying 1,726 pilots, co-pilots, navigators, bombadiers, gunners and radio operators. Fifty four planes and 532 men did not return.
I asked him what his job was on the Liberator....and he said that since he was the smallest man on the crew, he got shoved into the tail of the plane to man those guns. He said that it was cold and boring back there....and that he frequently fell asleep. The pilot would call back to him every so often to make sure he was awake. He said that he was wide awake the entire mission to and from Ploiesti....and for days afterward.
It was an honor standing in his presence, and the look in his eyes as he said "But we got the job done" is something that I will carry with me for years to come. My only regret....that I did not go back to the counter with him and buy his lunch. Only after I got close to home did I realize just what I had failed to do.....I failed to give back to this man who risked his life so many times fighting the greatest evil our world has known and ensuring freedom for all generations to come.
Tim
At that moment, I realized that I was talking to a man who was on the mission that was later to be called "Black Sunday". One hundred and seventy seven B-24s departed Lybia, carrying 1,726 pilots, co-pilots, navigators, bombadiers, gunners and radio operators. Fifty four planes and 532 men did not return.
I asked him what his job was on the Liberator....and he said that since he was the smallest man on the crew, he got shoved into the tail of the plane to man those guns. He said that it was cold and boring back there....and that he frequently fell asleep. The pilot would call back to him every so often to make sure he was awake. He said that he was wide awake the entire mission to and from Ploiesti....and for days afterward.
It was an honor standing in his presence, and the look in his eyes as he said "But we got the job done" is something that I will carry with me for years to come. My only regret....that I did not go back to the counter with him and buy his lunch. Only after I got close to home did I realize just what I had failed to do.....I failed to give back to this man who risked his life so many times fighting the greatest evil our world has known and ensuring freedom for all generations to come.
Tim