Subscribe Now

Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter Your Name
Enter Your E-Mail

Sponsors

Internet Marketing
Business Letter
Nursing job opportunities


Categories




Sign Up Here

Home / Family


Print | Send To Friends | Add To Favorites | Comment

Brothers in Arms

By: William E. Paterson

Article Word Count: 3131 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 5 Views






Members of the World War II generation are known for being more



than a little reticent about sharing their experiences. They



were reared in an era when doing one’s duty – national, family



or otherwise – was simply expected. "Make no complaints; expect



no accolades" was the unspoken credo. While their reluctance to



emote is not surprising, it has left a bit of a void in our



understanding of their noble deeds, performed both on the



battlefield and on the homefront.







Only in recent years have these stalwarts begun to receive their



due appreciation. Why the belated fanfare? One could argue that



the baby boomers finally recognized that the subject of World



War II could be, well, marketable. Tom Brokaw’s book, "The



Greatest Generation," Steven Spielberg’s film, "Saving Private



Ryan," and Tom Hanks’ HBO miniseries, "Band of Brothers" have



given new perspective to the most globally significant war on



record.







Now, as members of Generation X and beyond get their first real



taste of world conflict in the wake of September 11, the efforts



of those who literally saved the world more than fifty years ago



are no longer irrelevant lessons in a tattered history book. At



long last, we want to hear more of their stories. And, indeed,



every member of this generation has one to tell.







Seven Lives for Seven Brothers In the Italian-American community



of Niagara Falls, New York, sending multiple sons into battle



was a fact of life. But Vincenza DeBiase, a spirited mother of



11, went above and beyond the call of duty, watching as five of



her seven sons were called to serve.







The Niagara Falls community persevered through life on the



homefront with limited access to meat, shoes and gasoline – no



easy task for the DeBiase family of thirteen. Vincenza and James



DeBiase’s oldest son, Jim, was married and not eligible for



duty. He did, however, serve his community as an air raid



warden. And though their youngest son, Don, was not yet of age



to serve, he diligently followed his brother each night to turn



off the neon air raid sign. Meanwhile, Frances, Eleanor, Evelyn



and Grace were like so many daughters and sisters of the era,



relied upon to stabilize the family, to help raise their younger



siblings and even to put food on the table.







With each draft notice that arrived, the pall over the DeBiase



home darkened. Throughout World War II, Vincenza proudly flew a



flag in her window displaying five stars, one for each son in



uniform: John, Pat, Lou, Ben and Joe. Over a period of five



years, she saw her sons wounded in every way that a person can



be – from physical agony to indelible emotional scars. Nearly



six decades later, even some members of their own family are



about to share in their experiences for the first time.







Lieutenant John DeBiase – 1917-1985 Among the first citizens



drafted in 1940, John was the rock of the DeBiase family. He was



first stationed in the Pacific on the offshore islands of



Hawaii, and later trained in armored artillery at Fort Sill,



Oklahoma. In 1944, John was sent to France with the 3rd Army,



where he served as a First Lieutenant under General Patton.







John, a gifted writer, frequently exchanged letters with the



family back home. Each word he penned was carefully crafted to



reassure his anxious parents and siblings that all was well.



Fortunately, many of John’s letters have survived. One of his



typically upbeat notes contains a telling afterthought: "…which



reminds me, it’s a darn good thing I am here, what with all my



younger brothers growing to six feet and more, I’ll need every



bit of strength I can accumulate to handle them. I hope I get



home before Donald grows up or I’ll have to take a back seat all



the way around at home." The underlying message to his mother



was, "Don’t worry, we’re all coming back."







John’s inner strength was genuine. Rumor has it that he once saw



an officer standing upright in clear view, making himself an



easy target. He yelled to the man, "Get your ass down before you



get it shot off!" That man was none other than General Patton.







But tragedy struck in 1944 when John fought in the Battle at



Metz on German soil. A severe wound resulted in the amputation



of half of his leg at Saarbrucken, in November of that year. In



February 1945, he wrote several letters home that omitted



details of the pain and fear he endured in that bloody,



life-altering moment on a muddy German battlefield. Instead,



John’s letters spoke of wonderful hospital care, and the fact



that he had, "everything I need and more." His accounts of



moving around in his wheelchair contained not the slightest



trace of bitterness or melancholy.







At that very moment, John’s younger brother, Joe, was MIA. John



wrote home an uncharacteristically frank letter saying, "I’m



hoping and praying he’s a prisoner, but I’m afraid he isn’t. I



guess we have to face that it was almost bound to happen to one



of us – only I hoped it would have spared Joe, Louie and Pat."



He would have switched fates with his brother in an instant.



Back home, a distraught Vincenza canceled Christmas.







John was discharged in December 1945, receiving both the Silver



Star and the Bronze Star. And, for leaving his leg on a French



battlefield, he was awarded the Purple Heart.







Major Patrick DeBiase – 1919-present Blessed with the DeBiase



head for business, Pat graduated from Niagara University in



1942. But in September of that year, he was sent to the Quarter



Master Depot in Indiana. It was there that he met his soul mate:



Joyce Garrett.







In November 1943, Pat was transferred to Camp Lee, Virginia



where he expected to stay. So he and Joyce made plans to be



married in April 1944. But war conditions changed, and a new



assignment was pending. Further complicating matters, Pat was a



staunch Catholic, while Joyce had been raised a Southern



Baptist. At the time, the Catholic Church would not perform such



marriages in church – although couples could be married by a



priest in the sacristy. Like many young couples, Pat and Joyce



hoped to wed before the uncertainties of war muddied their



future. Luckily, they found a priest in Maryland who agreed to



marry them, even though they were not members of his parish.







As if the situation weren’t tenuous enough, Pat had no leave



time and was due to report back to camp in three days. So, Joyce



took the train from Louisville to Richmond where they exchanged



vows. The nation’s capital served as a brief honeymoon site,



before Pat had to hurry back to Camp Lee. Two months later he



received a wire signed by General Eisenhower to report to London



by plane ASAP.







As an officer, Pat summoned all of his resources to locate his



brothers during his many supply trips throughout Europe – a



tough task given the tight secrecy during that period.



Eventually, Pat met up with Joe in northern England just before



he landed on Omaha Beach. He found Lou in southern England



before he left for France and the invasion of Marseilles. And he



was able to catch up with John in Paris, just before he left for



his ill-fated assignment in Metz, Germany.







Pat retired from the Officer Reserve in 1946, and received the



Bronze Star for his Service of Supply activities during the



Battle of the Bulge.







Corporal Benjamin DeBiase 1921-1997 Ben was drafted into the



Army Corp. of Engineers in 1942. His experience would prove to



be the least physically grueling of any member of the DeBiase



family – but no less challenging. Ben arrived at basic training



prepared to endure a service commitment as intense as those of



his friends and brothers. But during his training in the



mountains of Tennessee, Ben came down with a case of frostbite



severe enough to earn him a medical discharge. He was sent home



to his family without ever leaving U.S. soil.







Naturally, Ben considered himself extremely fortunate. But,



while he was spared the danger of the war raging overseas, Ben



was left to contemplate the question, "Why me?" that plagues



many survivors. The experience clearly impacted the way Ben



approached life from that day forward. He was determined to take



advantage of his second chance and to make the most of his time.







To that end, Ben began working tirelessly at the age of 18 – in



fact becoming something of a workaholic, putting in full time



hours at his printing business right up until the week he passed



away.







Staff Sergeant Louis DeBiase – 1924-1994 In 1943, Lou was



drafted and assigned to go to Europe with the 7th Army. He



served in the Quarter Master Corp., handling supplies in France



and Germany. When he was drafted, his parents were positively



distraught. Losing a fourth son to the war effort was simply



more than they could bear. Lou’s father, in particular, just



couldn’t understand why the country was taking another son from



him.







Nonetheless, James dutifully delivered his son to report at Fort



Niagara. Within days, a heart attack claimed the life of the



DeBiase patriarch – ironically, the family’s only casualty of



war. To this day, his sons and daughters refer to the cause of



death as a broken heart. All of the sons came home for the



funeral, one of the few times all seven would be together. The



fact that Lou never saw frontline action in the Army was



overshadowed by the fact that his draft notice may have played a



role in his father’s passing. In 1946, Lou received an honorable



discharge.







Army Private First Class Joseph DeBiase – 1925-present The last



DeBiase brother to go to war, Joe’s experience was by far the



most traumatic. He joined the 423rd Infantry Regiment, seeing



duty in England, France and Belgium. The early days of Joe’s



tour were uneventful, as evidenced by a note he sent home in



early 1944 saying that, "The worst is over."







But on December 14, 1944, that would all change. Joe, another



soldier and their sergeant were sent to take a small farmhouse



near the Siegfried Line for use as an observation post. Joe and



his companions cautiously neared what appeared to be an



abandoned building. All at once, a sniper lurking inside shot



Joe in the left leg – though the enemy quickly met his maker



with a grenade hurled by the sergeant. Joe’s mates headed to



Schonberg, Belgium to get help, expecting to return the next



day. Meanwhile, Joe lay wounded, shivering and hungry.







Unfortunately, the following day came and went without the



arrival of reinforcements. So Joe buried the dead German soldier



in the hay, fearing retribution should he be found by the enemy.



Joe knew that the delay signaled trouble, a premonition



confirmed by the roar of jet engines and tanks on the morning of



December 16. As artillery shells peppered the farmhouse, Joe hid



under a sofa and quietly prayed.







By December 19, Joe knew he’d soon be discovered by German



troops, and decided to try his luck surrendering as a wounded



soldier. So he gathered up his remaining strength, and set out



on the rough, frigid road to Schonberg. Suddenly, an American



jeep emerged from the woods. They had been trying to get to him



for days, but had been in hiding due to the German onslaught.







The soldiers were under orders to surrender, but an unexpected



shell saved them the trouble. The trailer overturned, and



everyone onboard was injured, including Joe who was hit with



shrapnel in his abdomen and leg. The enemy transported their new



American prisoners to Schonberg. There, at a church hall, the



dead and wounded poured in, creating what Joe recalls as "a



scene of mass confusion and chaos."







On December 22, finally warm and free of shrapnel, Joe joined



the exhausted walking wounded on a march to Prum. According to



Joe, "We were loaded onto boxcars and taken to Linburg, Germany



on Christmas Day, and then forced to walk three days to another



train station." The journey continued until they reached Stalag



4-B on New Year’s Eve. "We were freezing cold and had nothing to



eat but putrid soup," says Joe. After two weeks of paralyzing



hunger, Joe and 35 others were sent to Gorlitz in Silesia where



they were indentured to repair railroads and labor in a blanket



factory.







In February, Joe got what could be considered a break only under



those unimaginable conditions – he was assigned to work in a



bakery, shoveling sawdust into the oven fireboxes. Each day, he



hid loaves of bread in his overcoat in order to feed his



starving friends. Joe says, "I’d toss the bread into the



iron-barred window when the guard wasn’t looking. Then one day,



a French baker snitched on me." Joe was severely beaten for his



actions and relieved of his post. But not before he traded two



loaves of bread to a German soldier for a P-38 pistol that would



later come in quite handy.







By the end of February, Joe was shipped to a frigid camp at the



Elbe River, where nearly everyone was suffering from dysentery.



Here, Joe and others worked to repair bombed out railroads –



until they were abruptly evacuated in late March.







Suddenly came a glimmer of hope. As one of the horses keeled



over in the frigid snow, the starving Germans stopped to make a



meal of the fallen animal. Joe and five companions recognized



their opportunity. Joe says, "We were sent into the woods to



gather wood to cook the horsemeat. We decided to make a break



for it." Using Joe’s bartered pistol, they stole a Studebaker



truck and headed for the Czech border, where they eventually met



the 1st Division, 3rd Army.







Weeks later, the war was over. But many of the prisoners left



behind were never heard from again. Were it not for his daring



escape, Joe likely would have suffered the same fate. However,



he refuses to view his actions as heroic, insisting that his



good fortune was a combination of "self-preservation, teamwork,



street smarts and the goodwill of strangers."







Joe’s ordeal earned him a Purple Heart – an honor for which he



paid dearly. He also received European Medals of Honor and a



Combat Infantry Badge.







>From Boys to Men Joe, John and Pat each landed on Omaha Beach at



various times shortly after D-Day. All but Ben were involved in



battles that saw friends and enemies alike draw their last



breaths. In the end, one of Vincenza’s sons would leave his leg



in the European theatre – three others their innocence. Yet,



each of the DeBiase brothers understood that they could have



lost so much more. Over the next fifty-plus years, the brothers



rarely spoke of the war, to each other or to anyone else. To



them, the experience is best left unremembered. For the rest of



us, quite the contrary is true.







.



Grab this articles

Related articles


Newest Articles

Most Popular Articles