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A final farewell for our D-Day heroes

The 60th anniversary in 2004 was set to be the last. But an 11th-hour government change of mind means veterans will travel to Normandy on June 6 one more time.

April 7, 2009 09:27
Troops establish themselves on the beach after making their way through low water from  landing craft

By

James Martin And Yaakov Wise

6 min read

Co-ordinating the landing on Juno beach in Normandy were officers and men from British Combined Operations, including a young Leading Aircraftsman, David Teacher, who, now 85, lives with his wife of 66 years, Nancy, in Salford.

Mr Teacher, a retired garage proprietor, is vice chairman of the Bolton and District Normandy Veterans’ Association and a former chairman of Manchester Association of Jewish Ex-Servicemen.

Thanks to an unexpected decision by the British government to follow the US lead and back financially a 65th D-Day commemoration, he will be among the Lancashire veterans to return to the beaches and remember their friends and colleagues who died.

Mr Teacher was born in Hastings and brought up both in England and Mandate Palestine, where part of his family had settled. When he returned to England he joined the RAF and trained as a driver-mechanic. While based in Scotland in 1943 he obtained a special “unofficial” weekend pass so that he could marry his childhood sweetheart at Prestwich’s Holy Law Synagogue.