Charles Shay, D-Day veteran who saved lives on Omaha Seashore as a 19-year-old U.S. Military medic, dies at 101

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Charles Shay, a adorned Native American veteran who was a 19-year-old U.S. Military medic when he landed on Omaha Seashore on D-Day and helped save lives, died on Wednesday. He was 101.

Shay died at his house in Bretteville-L’Orgueilleuse in France’s Normandy area, his longtime buddy and carer Marie-Pascale Legrand mentioned.

Shay, of the Penobscot tribe and from Indian Island within the U.S. state of Maine, was awarded the Silver Star for repeatedly plunging into the ocean and carrying critically wounded troopers to relative security, saving them from drowning. He additionally acquired France’s highest award, the Legion of Honor, in 2007.

Shay had been dwelling in France since 2018, not removed from the shores of Normandy the place practically 160,000 troops from Britain, the U.S., Canada and different nations landed on D-Day on June 6, 1944. The Battle of Normandy hastened Germany’s defeat, which got here lower than a 12 months later.

“He handed away peacefully surrounded by his family members,” Legrand advised The Related Press.

Shay advised CBS Information in 2019 that he moved to France to be near his fallen brothers.

“I’ll die right here,” Shay advised CBS Information on the time. “I consider that I can discuss with the souls of the lads which are nonetheless wandering on the seaside right here. And I simply tried to guarantee them that they aren’t forgotten.”

WWII veteran Charles Shay is pictured at his house, March 24, 2024, in Bretteville-l’Orgueilleuse, Normandy. 

Jeffrey Schaeffer/AP


The Charles Shay Memorial group, which honors the reminiscence of about 500 Native Individuals who landed on the Normandy seashores, mentioned in a assertion posted on Fb that “our hearts are deeply saddened as we share that our beloved Charles Norman Shay … has returned house to the Creator and the Spirit World.”

“He was an extremely loving father, grandfather, father-in-law, and uncle, a hero to many, and an total superb human being,” the assertion mentioned. “Charles leaves a legacy of affection, service, braveness, spirit, responsibility and household that continues to shine brightly.”

Prepared to provide his life

On D-Day, 4,414 Allied troops misplaced their lives — 2,501 of them Individuals. Greater than 5,000 have been wounded. On the German aspect, a number of thousand have been killed or wounded.

“Mortars and artillery coming at us,” Shay advised CBS Information in 2019. “When the ramp went down, the lads that have been standing within the entrance, a few of them have been killed instantly.”

Others have been so badly damage, they could not drag themselves out of the surf.

“Many males that had been wounded have been laying and couldn’t assist themselves within the tide,” Shay advised CBS Information.

Shay survived.

“I assume I used to be ready to provide my life if I needed to. Happily, I didn’t should,” Shay mentioned in a 2024 interview with The Related Press.

“I had been given a job, and the way in which I checked out it, it was as much as me to finish my job,” he recalled. “I didn’t have time to fret about my state of affairs of being there and maybe dropping my life. There was no time for this.”

On that evening, exhausted, he ultimately fell asleep in a grove above the seaside.

“After I awoke within the morning, it was like I used to be sleeping in a graveyard as a result of there have been lifeless Individuals and Germans surrounding me,” he recalled. “I stayed there for not very lengthy and I continued on my approach.”

Shay then pursued his mission in Normandy for a number of weeks, rescuing these wounded, earlier than heading with American troops to japanese France and Germany, the place he was taken prisoner in March 1945 and liberated a number of weeks later.

Spreading a message of peace

After World Battle II, Shay reenlisted within the navy as a result of the state of affairs of Native Individuals in his house state of Maine was too precarious resulting from poverty and discrimination.

Maine wouldn’t enable people dwelling on Native American reservations to vote till 1954.

Shay continued to witness historical past — returning to fight as a medic through the Korean Battle, collaborating in U.S. nuclear testing within the Marshall Islands and later working on the Worldwide Atomic Vitality Company in Vienna, Austria.

For over 60 years, he didn’t discuss his WWII expertise.

FRANCE-WWII-DDAY-ANNIVERSARY

World Battle II veteran Charles Norman Shay, a Penobscot Native American, who took half within the Operation Overlord (Battle of Normandy) throughout D-Day on June 6, 1944, poses on the Charles Shay Indian Memorial on Might 4, 2019, in Omaha Seashore, western France.

LOIC VENANCE/AFP by way of Getty Pictures


However he started attending D-Day commemorations in 2007 and in recent times, he has seized many events to provide his highly effective testimony and unfold a message of peace.

Through the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020-2021, Shay’s lone presence marked commemoration ceremonies as journey restrictions prevented different veterans or households of fallen troopers from the U.S., Britain and different allied international locations from making the journey to France.

Unhappiness at seeing battle again in Europe

For years, Shay used to carry out a sage-burning ceremony, in homage to those that died, on a bluff overlooking Omaha Seashore, the place the monument bearing his identify now stands.

On June 6, 2022, he handed over the remembrance process to a different Native American, Julia Kelly, a Gulf Battle veteran from the Crow tribe. That was simply over three months after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in what was to grow to be the worst battle on the continent since 1945.

Shay then expressed his unhappiness at seeing battle again on the continent.

“Ukraine is a really unhappy state of affairs. I really feel sorry for the individuals there and I do not know why this battle needed to come,” he mentioned. “In 1944, I landed on these seashores and we thought we might carry peace to the world. But it surely’s not attainable.”

In this 2007 photo, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, awards the French Legion of Honor Medal to World War II veteran Charles Shay

On this 2007 picture, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, awards the French Legion of Honor Medal to World Battle II veteran Charles Shay in Washington, D.C..

Haraz N. Ghanbari/AP


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