One by one, D-Day memories fade as war’s witnesses die

A sign reading “To our Dear Friend Bernard” encircle flowers for late Jewish French-American World War II veteran, Bernard Dargols during a funeral ceremony at the Pere Lachaise cemetery in Paris, Thursday, May 9, 2019. Dargols waded onto Omaha Beach in June 1944 as an American soldier to help liberate France from Nazis who persecuted his Jewish family. At 98, Dargols died last week. An ever-smaller number of D-Day veterans will take part in June 6, 2019 ceremonies marking the 75th anniversary of history’s largest amphibian invasion. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

FILE - In this June 30, 2007 file photo, French-born GI Bernard Dargols, 87, left, who landed with the US troops on Omaha Beach on June 8, 1945, Raymond Mouquet, 68, second left, the mayor of the nearby town of Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer and American WW II veteran Arnold Franco, 83, from New York, third left, take part to a ceremony at the American cemetery and Memorial in Colleville-sur-Mer, Normandy. Dargols waded onto Omaha Beach in June 1944 as an American soldier to help liberate France from Nazis who persecuted his Jewish family. At 98, Dargols died last week. An ever-smaller number of D-Day veterans will take part in June 6, 2019 ceremonies marking the 75th anniversary of history’s largest amphibian invasion. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)

In this photo taken on Thursday May 8, 2014, Bernard Dargols poses during an interview with the Associated Press at his home in La Garenne-Colombes, outside Paris. Dargols waded onto Omaha Beach in June 1944 as an American soldier to help liberate France from Nazis who persecuted his Jewish family. At 98, Dargols died last week. An ever-smaller number of D-Day veterans will take part in June 6, 2019 ceremonies marking the 75th anniversary of history’s largest amphibian invasion. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)

PARIS — One more funeral, one less witness to the world’s worst war.

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