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locals depicted in scenes from the longest yarn knitting project. they remember the american parachutists landing near their village. translation: well, my parents realised it was d-day, _ but they were expecting the british, but not the americans. i can still remember my parents. they couldn't believe it. yes, my parents were happy when they saw the americans arrive and the germans flee. antoinette still has her communion dress made from one of the white parachutes the airborne forces left behind. this is paulette on the left with the white bow in her hair. the photograph has been recreated in one of the knitted panels. she tells me what it was like for a young girl from rural france to meet americans for the first time. they crossed the line. they came across the field and they were in front of our yard. they asked us about things we didn't know and they gave us chewing gum and stuff, but we didn't want any. chocolat?
UkUsD-day-landingsLocalsTranslationParachutistsScenesVillageParentsYarn-knitting-projectOneGermanstranslation: they crossed the line. they came across the field and they were in front of our yard. they asked us about things we didn't know and they gave us chewing gum and stuff, but we didn't want any. chocolat? oh, yes, and chewing gum. we didn't want any because we didn't know them. but they were very nice. here's jacqueline on the left on her family's small farm. life under the germans had been tough for most, and food was scarce. translation: so my mother gave us something to eat, _ and she was 35, she didn't eat. she always told us that she couldn't see all the young soldiers who were going to be killed to take her own. she couldn't eat lunch that day, and that was the most painful moment of the d—day for me, because i saw my mother unhappy, on the verge of tears. what i remember about the americans is that their bread was very, very white. because we had food
ThingsUsTranslationFrontYesChewing-gumLineYardStuffThe-fieldChocolatGermans