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My family’s war: Uncle Arthur the RAF hero and bereaved Uncle Jean in Germany’s rubble

As the 75th anniversary of D-day approaches, Die Welt’s London correspondent tells a story of remembrance, pain and catharsis

On the night of 3 May 1944, just over a month before D-day, pilot Arthur Grain took off in his Lancaster bomber, and never came back. His aircraft was just minutes from its target when it was hit by German shells that sent Grain and his seven crew from 550 RAF squadron hurtling into woodland near the village of Cheniers, north-east France.

Photographs from the time show village residents with a small wooden box containing the human remains they had retrieved from the crash site. Today, white tombstones erected by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission stand in the eastern corner of the cemetery in Cheniers. To their right is a large piece of the wing of Grain’s plane. After 75 years, the metal has not rusted and the black paint is still visible. For a long time, the villagers kept it in a barn. Now it stands like an exclamation mark: this all really happened, right here.

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from The Guardian http://bit.ly/2QnnAqh

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