Costa Rica’s Forgotten WWII Role Echoes on D-Day’s 82nd Anniversary
Eighty-two years ago today, roughly 160,000 Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, launching Operation Overlord to liberate German-occupied Western Europe — the single day that turned the course of World War II and one that still resonates deeply across Costa Rica’s foreign community. For the North American, British and European retirees who make up a large share of life here, June 6 is more than a date in a history book. Many grew up with fathers, grandfathers and uncles who served, and a dwindling few remember the war firsthand. In Normandy on Saturday, world leaders and a small group of surviving veterans gathered to honor the men who stormed the beaches in 1944. More than 4,400 Allied troops were killed on that single day, and more than half of them were Americans. As the largest seaborne military operation in history, D-Day launched with tens of thousands of troops landing simultaneously across five separate beaches in Normandy. Ceremonies stretched along the ...