Leon Gautier, who was the last surviving member of the French commando unit that waded ashore on D-Day, alongside allied troops to begin the liberation of France, has died aged 100.
Key points:
- Leon Gautier was one of 177 French green berets who stormed the Normandy beaches in 1944
- French President Emmanuel Macron described Gautier and his comrades as “heroes of the Liberation”
- In 2019 Gautier said war was “misery”
Gautier was one of 177 French green berets who stormed the Normandy beaches defended by Adolf Hitler’s forces in 1944.
French President Emmanuel Macron described Gautier and his comrades as “heroes of the Liberation”.
“We will not forget him,” Macron wrote on Twitter.
Last month Gautier presented a student marine commando with his green beret at a passing out parade at Colleville-Montgomery, near where he had landed on Sword Beach in a hail of enemy fire at the age of 21.
In a poignant moment during that ceremony, the young marine knelt on one knee to allow Gautier, who was in a wheelchair, to straighten his beret.
Gautier spoke to Reuters news agency in 2019 at his house several hundred metres from the remnants of a German bunker he and comrades from the special forces of French Captain Philippe Kieffer had secured before pushing inland.
He recalled how he had been too young to join the army when Hitler’s forces occupied France in World War II, and so enrolled in the navy.
He was on board one of the last French warships to sail for Britain to join the Free French Forces of General Charles de Gaulle as the Germans swept across the northern half of France in 1940.
Decades later he still grappled with the violence of war.
“War is a misery,” he said.
“Not all that long ago, and perhaps you find this silly, but I would think ‘perhaps I killed a young lad, perhaps I orphaned children, perhaps I widowed a woman or made a mother cry’.
“I didn’t want that. I’m not a bad man. You kill a man who’s done nothing to you. That’s war and you do it for your country.”
Reuters