David Goldberg says he never suffered a scratch in WWII, yet the memories have left a lasting mark on his soul.
At 20 years old, the young man drafted from a poor New York family had no expectations of heroics as he landed at Normandy, fought in the Battle of the Bulge, liberated Buchenwald and Saint Lo concentration camps, and protected Gen.
Omar Bradley from attack.
He claims he is no hero. "I was just doing my duty as master sergeant," says the former communications squad leader of the United States Army 79th Field Artillery.
Among his many medals, certificates and plaques is the 5-Star Silver medal from President
Eisenhower for his bravery, courage and service in five prominent European battles against the German invasion.
Goldberg and his 12 men laid the two-way communication wires wherever needed on the battlefront and afterward removed them as if they were never there.
Among his war chest of memories were wires laid between Gen. Omar Bradley's field headquarters to a post 300 yards away when combat struck.
"It was just three of us. One of my men was fatally hit and the other severely wounded," he recalls. "Under heavy fire, I had to belly crawl to continue getting the wires laid when I saw four Germans trying to scale the wall to the general's headquarters."
With only a .45 handgun he killed one of them that prevented the capture of the commanding general's headquarters. "Trying to belly crawl back I collapsed and woke up in a hospital."
Stories like these have been included in a book "Men of Honor: American GIs in Jewish Holocaust" by
Jeff Donaldson. A member of the Jewish War Veterans, Goldberg often shares his first person account on a particular day in 1945 when he was among the first to storm Buchenwald concentration camp, breaking down the entry door:
We went into the first barrack. The odor was unbelievable! There were hundreds of men, five to one bunk, and to say they were skin and bones were not the words for it. As they carried one man out on a stretcher, I grabbed a blanket and covered him with it and he started to cry. I cried with him."
The soft-spoken Goldberg says that a day rarely goes by, even throughout his successful career as a fabric wholesaler in the movie industry, in which he doesn't reflect on the events he witnessed during the five years of service to his country.
He keeps all his memories in a special photo album. On the war vet's 75th birthday in 1992, President
Clinton and former presidents
Ford,
Carter,
Reagan and
Bush as well as
Colin Powell sent birthday letters.
Also extending their best wishes were celebrity well wishers he met during his career that included
Frank Sinatra,
Ann Margaret,Kirk Douglas,
Clint Eastwood and
Gregory Peck, who he says was one of his best friends.
And in his album, the widowerkeeps a picture of his wife of 50 years,
Joyce, and their two children and grandchildren.
At 89 years old and residing at Agoura Hills Senior Retreat, Goldberg must continue to make room for the plaques, medals and certificates that are still being presented to him - one just last year by the Jewish War Veterans.
He joined other residents in a special ceremony that the senior retreat does each year for the veterans. Activities Director
Adriana Roatold said at the gathering of residents, friends and families, "This is a tribute to their glory and their devotion of duty. God Bless you who came here today to share in this tribute. Because of our veterans' service and the service of those in the armed forces today, the United States is still the land of the free and the home of the brave."