Canadian veterans prepare to return to Juno Beach for 75th anniversary of D-Day
OTTAWA — Albert Roy was a fresh-faced 20-year-old from St. Jean Baptiste, Man., when Canadian, American and British troops stormed ashore on D-Day to begin the liberation of Western Europe from Nazi control.
An anti-aircraft gunner, Roy was not in the first wave on June 6, 1944. He spent much of the first month after the invasion waiting to set foot on the mainland. Shortly after he landed in July 1944, however, tragedy struck.
Roy’s unit was passing the city of Caen when he looked up and saw a Lancaster bomber opening its bomb doors.
“I yelled: ‘Hey, let’s get to the slit trenches. He’s not aiming properly,’ ” recalls Roy, who is now 95 years old. “I managed to get into my slit trench, but we got hit by shrapnel quite a bit.”