This column is being written on Memorial Day. Due to the publishing schedules of the various newspapers in which this column appears, it will be read anywhere from two days to one week after Memorial Day. An editor might say, “It’s not timely.” I would respond, “It’s always ‘timely.’ This subject is something that we should memorialize every day in America.”
In a
typical year I spend two to three months in Europe. Most of that time is spent working
in Italy, leading tours to all of the undiscovered places I have found over the
years. My guests and I visit locals-only restaurants, wineries, butcher shops,
facilities where they press olive oil, museums, and host private opera
concerts. But one of the most meaningful visits we make when we are in the
Tuscany Region, and it’s always on the last day, is the Florence-American World
War II Cemetery.
The following is a column I wrote a couple of years ago. It seemed appropriate to bring it back out today:
When I began leading tours to Europe, I didn’t take guests to the Florence
American Cemetery. Our time was more focused on the food, wine, and art of this
region. Honestly, I spent almost 10 years passing the cemetery on the way to
Florence from our home base in Barberino. I could see it through the trees
while riding on the highway. I am ashamed to admit that— several times— I had
the thought, “Well, I’ve been to Normandy, and have seen the cemetery there, I’ve
already checked that box.”
I couldn’t
have been more wrong— or more insensitive.
Two years
ago, during our guest’s free day. My friend, collaborator, and television
co-host, the watercolorist, Wyatt Waters and I were driving through the Tuscan
countryside trying to find a place or setting he might want to paint. We were
near the cemetery I had so uncaringly passed all of those years, and I finally
said, “Let’s just pull in there and check it out.” It’s not an overstatement to
say that pulling into the cemetery that day changed my on life on several
levels.
If you
have never visited to a cemetery operated by the American Battle Monuments
Commission, you have truly missed out. If you have only been to Normandy, and
none of the others, you have still missed out. The American Battle Monuments
Commission is a governmental agency operated out of the Executive Branch and
maintains all of our overseas cemeteries from World War I and World War II. Our
country may get a few things wrong, but one of the things we truly get right is
how we own and operate these sacred places where we bury and honor those who
have sacrificed in defense of our freedoms.
The
Florence American Cemetery is one of two WWII cemeteries in Italy. The
Sicily-Rome Cemetery covers those who lost their lives in the southern part of
the country— using Rome as the dividing line— and The Florence American
Cemetery covers the northern half of Italy. Over 4,300 soldiers are buried
there, and the wall of the missing lists another 1,409 soldiers. It is 70 acres
of pristinely manicured American soil, just a few miles outside of Florence, and
completely owned and maintained by the United States of America.
When
Waters and I first visited we were greeted by the superintendent, Angel Matos,
a retired naval officer from New York, whose first military assignment was in
Gulfport, Mississippi. Matos lives on the grounds and is the ultimate
ambassador for his country, his agency, and those buried in his cemetery. While
Waters completed a watercolor of a statue on the grounds, Matos gave me a full
tour of the cemetery. Only one-third of those who were killed in combat in the
northern half of the Italian campaign are buried there. The other two thirds
were sent home to be interred in Arlington or in their hometown. There are more
than 1,400 names listed on the wall of the missing, most were Army air corps
who were lost flying missions over the Adriatic. You will be proud to know that
your country is still looking for, finding, and identifying those soldiers
missing in action.
The
Italian campaign was brutal and is overlooked by many as the liberation of Rome
was on June 5th, 1944, the day before the Normandy beach landing.
But there were three landings in Italy prior to that, and the Germans had built
a defensive line of manpower and weaponry— The Gothic Line— that was five miles
deep and stretched the entire width of Italy through the Apennine Mountains.
At the end
of the day of that first cemetery visit, Waters and I met at the base of the
flag after he finished his painting. As it does every day, “Taps” began playing
in the distance. As the flag was being lowered, Matos asked if we would like to
fold the flag. It was one of the most meaningful moments in my life. As we
tucked the final corner of the flag into the tight triangular pocket we had created,
I vowed to do two things: Take my groups— and every other group thereafter— to
this sacred place, and to never, ever, pass another American war cemetery
without stopping and paying my respects.
These days
when I visit, I often encounter Italian citizens who are also there to pay
their respects for the sacrifices made by young American men and women— some as
young as 17, with an average age of 22— who volunteered to travel to a country
halfway across the globe to liberate people they had never— and would never—
meet from an evil and tyrannical madman.
There are 64 Mississippians buried in the Florence American Cemetery. One of them is U.S. Army Captain Bernard Yolles from Winona. A Purple Heart recipient who left his family’s department store business, a wife, and baby daughter behind to volunteer for service when he was 24-years old. Yolles, a member of the only Jewish family in Winona at the time led an all African-American division of Buffalo Soldiers into battle.
Jewish
Captain from Mississippi, leading an all-black division in an army that was segregated
at the time— his is an amazing story, and just one of over 4,000 stories that
need to be told at the Florence American Cemetery.
I always
tell our guests the story of Captain Bernard Yolles and give them some
backstory on his life in Winona before the war. I also tell ask guests to stop
by another cross or Star of David on the grounds for a minute and say a short
prayer of gratitude to that soldier. It might be the only time anyone ever
visits that particular grave.
Today I am
feeling grateful that I know the meaning of sacrifice and am in awe and humbled
by those Americans who paid the ultimate sacrifice in World War II.
Onward.
8 comments:
Two to three months a year in Europe has something to do with sacrifice?
@12:38PM - I was just going to let your idle grousing go by as part of the "jackassery." It must be so hard for you to appreciate other people's success! RSJ never claimed he was making a sacrifice; nor did he compare himself to honorable veterans that died serving the USA. That he has been able to parlay his restaurant business into a European guide service is commendable - and enjoyable for many who have explored Italy with him. Travel can also be a great learning experience - especially when it brings you full circle to your home from half a world away.
Now move along...
I went to the British cemetery in Arnhem (A Bridge Too Far) about 12 years ago. 2500 British paratroopers are buried there. All were 23 years old. They enlisted at 18 in1939. A very moving experience.
I have only been to Arlington, and witnessing the Changing of the Guard, at The Tomb of the Unknown...it is a challenge not to shed tears. Very solemn, and shakes me to my core every time.
One of the more impressive, yet simple, tombstones is that of Omar Bradley, "General of the Army", with a few stars on the opposite side...May they RIP.
@10:37
Arlington is definitely an experience that most people should have. Even visiting the memorial cemataries around the state are an experience.
RSJ is an example of the American dream fulfilled... great entrepreneur, great chef, great writer, great guy. I was hoping, though, to see the gumbo recipe at the end of the article.
On monday Labor Day the burial remains of General Forrest and his wife were disinterred and you give us St. JOHN'S SARCIFICE shitick.
I spent 2-1/2 years--1962 to 1965-- in parts of the Italy's Colonial Empire.Some of the greatest Fascist Architecture in all of Europe...especially Eriteria.
But the American military forces in WWII were no more welcome in Italy than Il Duce's colonial Armies were welcome in Libya and Abassinia.
That should read Memorial Day, of course.
Post a Comment