Monday, June 17, 2019

An American veteran, 97, and French woman, 92, who fell in love during World War II, have been reunited for the first time in 75 years



Robbins was just a 24-year-old soldier in the US army when he first laid eyes on Jeannine Ganaye, in the north east town of Briey in 1944.

Robbins had been in need of someone to wash his clothes when Jeannine’s mum stepped in to help. It wasn’t long before the pair fell in love, but two months later Robbins was forced to leave the village and make his way to the Eastern Front to fight against the Axis Powers.

When the war came to an end in 1945, she even began learning English, in the hopes he would one day come back for her.

But instead, Robbins, who enlisted in the 26th Infantry, First Division in 1940 and later volunteered to serve in a bakery battalion, returned to his native US.

There, he met his wife of 70 years, Lillian. The pair worked side by side in a hardware store in Mississippi for 50 years before she passed away aged 92 in 2015.

Jeannine also fell in love once again, and married in 1949 before going on to have five children.
However, Robbins never forgot about his romance in France, keeping a black and white photo of Jeannine tucked away for seven decades.

He showed the very same photo to a group of French journalists who were reporting on WW2 veterans in the US, telling them he’d like to return to her village to ‘find her family’ while he was in France for the 75th anniversary of D-Day.

But sure enough, the journalists tracked down Jeannine at a retirement home in Montigny-lès-Metz, Moselle, about 27 miles from where the pair first met.



https://www.unilad.co.uk/news/american-veteran-97-and-french-woman-92-who-fell-in-love-during-world-war-2-reunited
https://www.simplemost.com/97-year-old-d-day-veteran-reunited-lost-love/
https://www.republicain-lorrain.fr/edition-de-metz-agglo-et-orne/2019/06/12/l-histoire-de-jeanine-et-de-son-gi-bouleverse-le-monde-entier

2 comments:

  1. It's amazing how war leaves indelible memories in peoples minds. Whether good or bad, the memories are etched like that in stone. This is simply beautiful. Jesse, you do your unassuming job so well sir. Thank you for posting this incredible story.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. thank you for the compliment!
      You're very welcome, it's my pleasure to find and share the great stuff I rarely come across (this one had zero to do with wheels)
      Wait... what? Unassuming? Damn it, I'm certain I'm going to be awarded a Pulitzer! I want my award!
      (I doubt they even have a category I'd be selected for, but a Pulitzer is my high hope)

      Delete