The Sunday Series (In Honor), with Mark Brodinsky

There may be no better example of courage, hope and inspiration.

Today and tomorrow we show our respect, admiration and gratitude for the men and women who serve our country, who sacrifice their own safety, their own lives to protect ours, to secure our freedom and our way of life.

They deserve to be thought of each day, to be remembered and to be honored.

Today the story of one such hero. He’s just one of the men, for whom without his dedication and courage, the freedom and the nation we love might have ceased to exist.

I am Mark Brodinsky and this is The Sunday Series.


The Sunday Series (In Honor): Saving the World
(first published July 6th, 2014)

harvey brotman

70-years removed from living it, the memories for Harvey Brotman are still pretty vivid.

Exactly one year after the day which “will live in infamy”, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, Harvey Brotman and two friends decided it was time to make a move.  “I went down with two buddies to enlist”, says Harvey,  “because we knew we’d be drafted anyway.  Two of us got accepted, the other guy didn’t make it because of a hearing issue.”

Harvey didn’t think much of the initial enlistment experience, but what he couldn’t know then, is he would become part of one of the greatest military invasions in the history of the world.

First stop for Harvey and his friend was Fort Meade, Maryland and then quickly on to Abilene, Texas. Abilene was tough – sand, desert, and constant wind storms. Harvey, now Private Brotman, says, “they would march us into sandstorms…sand hitting us in the face, your food was covered with sand, you had to keep brushing it off before you could eat. Finally someone came to me and asked if I would like to go to Fort Benning, Georgia. I figured why not, any place is better than here. Then they told me the news, “there’s just one thing you’ll have to do though, jump out of a plane in flight. I said I would do it… to just to get out of Texas.”

about to jump

When Harvey got off the train at Fort Benning it wasn’t a pretty sight. “A lot of people were just laying there”, says Harvey. “Many of them with broken arms and broken legs and telling me I would be sorry. I figured well, I’m here now, I’m stuck. We did a lot of training, a lot of running, exercising and they took us out to show us how to pack the parachute. If you were going to jump, you had to have confidence in the chute you packed.” Pack, jump, practice.  Pack, jump, practice. Harvey was now part of the 101st Airborne Division at Fort Benning, the Screaming Eagles. And before he knew it Harvey was being called to head overseas. Destination: England.

screaming eagles

It wasn’t an easy trip by any stretch of the imagination. The paratroopers left from New York on a ship bound for Europe, but the engine went bad and the men had to spend the next 30 days in Newfoundland. Then it was on to Halifax, Nova Scotia to pick up supplies. Except the ship had an accident pulling into port and it took 45 days to get a new one.

Eventually these paratroopers, tired and weary, made it to England. Harvey says he stayed in Hungerford and practiced, practiced, practiced.  “We did a lot of training, a lot of jumping”, says Harvey. “We did a jump on a very windy day and we lost about 50 percent of the guys with broken arms and broken legs, but I was OK.”

As World War II took a turn, the Allied Forces planned for a massive invasion of France, on the beaches of Normandy. Harvey was about to play a part in the climactic battle of the war, D-Day. At 12am on June 6th, 1944, Harvey and his fellow paratroopers boarded one of the more than nine-hundred C47s which flew into France, five hours in advance of the ground invasion of D-Day.

Harvey remembers, “At 12:55am we jumped out of the plane, but I landed in the wrong place, there was no one around. I had a clicker I used for identification and if you got a click-click in return you knew someone was nearby. I clicked, but got no response, and it was pitch black, so I stayed in a hedgerow until it got light. Then I saw the 82nd airborne, I identified myself and told them I was from the 101st Airborne and they let me stay with them for four days to battle (the enemy) until I was sent back to my unit.”

D-Day-paratroopers-HU0308-007

Private Brotman’s primary responsibility in battle was as medic, to aid the wounded. But Harvey couldn’t save one of his own. On the very first day of battle, the man who became his best friend in the service was shot and killed. Harvey says when you’re 20-years-old, far from the safety of home and your friend is killed, that’s a tough thing to swallow, you can’t understand why, or how this is happening.  Even now you could see the pain in Harvey’s eyes as he remembers that moment. It was a tough repercussion of one of the toughest days of World War II.

Harvey’s group was part of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment. That group eventually ended up taking  Sainte-Mère-Église in France and remained there until it was time to head to Holland. Harvey and the other surviving paratroopers would jump into Arnhem, Holland, a strategic location on the banks of the Rhine River. The Battle of Arnhem, part of Operation Market Garden, was fought in September 1944.  It was during this invasion into Holland that Harvey took a piece of shrapnel in his chest, eventually leading to his being awarded the Purple Heart.

purple heart

After the eventual success by Allied Forces in Holland, it was onto Bastogne, Belgium, where Harvey and many of the 101st Airborne were in bad shape. “It was the worst”, says Harvey. “It was so cold, snow, freezing temperatures, very, very bad.  I went and got newspaper to shove into everyone’s boots to try and stop the onslaught of frostbite.  We were surrounded by Germans and there were no planes to come rescue us because it was always cloudy and snowing. The Germans wanted us to surrender.” But on Christmas Day, (1944), the clouds finally gave way and the bombers moved in and the besieged American forces were relieved by General George Patton‘s Third Army.  “We didn’t think we were going to get out of there”, says Harvey, “not until Patton showed up.”

patton

Harvey says one of the highlights of the war for him was actually getting to meet General Patton. On the way back from a short leave in England, Harvey was asked to do an inspection, and it turned out the general who would be conducting it was Patton. Harvey says Patton told him and the others, “go back and tell your Colonel you are a god damn good-looking bunch of men, go back and tell him that.” Harvey did just that, relaying the message back from one of the greatest war heroes of all time. Harvey says Patton was right, when not in battle, he and the other paratroopers were a great looking a bunch of men. “Our boots shined like crazy and our uniforms were always just right”, he says.

Harvey survived WWII and made it through the ranks during those years, going from Private, to Private First Class, to Corporal and then to Staff Sergeant.  Harvey says his greatest takeaway from his experience overseas and in battle: Life.

“Life is most meaningful”, says Harvey. Losing his best friend on the first day of the invasion brought that reality home in a hurry. “I learned a lot about life and there were so many nice people I met in France and England.”  But it might have been a telegram home which meant the most in Harvey’s life and to his mom back home in Baltimore.

Harvey was an only child. His father was killed in a car accident when Harvey was only 10-years-old, so it was just he and his mother living alone until the day he left to join the war.  Because Harvey’s parachute took him far from the assigned landing spot on D-Day, the military sent a telegram home to his mother, relaying to her that her 20-year-old son was missing in action. It wasn’t until Harvey got a 30-day leave and could send another telegram home that his mother knew the real story. He was fine. Ms. Brotman’s only child had survived.

A room in Harvey’s apartment is now adorned with pictures and awards from his time in the service. A Purple Heart a Bronze Star, the French Croix De Guerre, the European-African Middle-Eastern Campaign Medal, a Good Conduct Medal, and the WWII Victory Medal.  Harvey has saved each one of them.

medals for brotman  bronze star honor for brotman

These awards serve to remind Harvey of a time he will never forget.

How can he?  Harvey Brotman helped save the world.

Until next time, thanks for taking the time.

Mark

In honor of all those who have served, and as a reminder to all of us about the true meaning of this weekend, listen to this song by Tim McGraw: If You’re Reading This:

Mark Brodinsky, Author, Blogger, Speaker, Emmy Winner, USHEALTH Advisors, (www.ushagent.com/markbrodinsky)

Author: The #1 Amazon Best-Seller: It Takes 2. Surviving Breast Cancer: A Spouse’s Story
(http://www.spouses-story.com/)

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