There are Heroes Everywhere!
A WWII Vet gets recognized during my Lunch
Break at Wegmen's in Wilkes-Barre, PA. I have so much respect for
individuals such as Saul and it was an honor to see the ceremony take place as I was running for my sandwich. - Erik
World War II veteran finally awarded medal for his battle wound
A place in his heart
By RORY SWEENEY rsweeney@leader.net
TIMES LEADER/PETE G. WILCOX
Saul Gelb and his wife Jean take in moment after he received his Purple Heart. <
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“God, I thought I’d bleed to death,” Gelb recalled on Thursday.
But he lived, and the standoff continued until American fighter planes thundered overhead days later, forcing a German withdrawal.
The soldier who had been with Gelb upstairs wanted him to apply immediately for the Purple Heart, but he was unable to. As the frontlines of World War II progressed toward Berlin and Gelb’s injury healed, the urgency to apply faded and was finally forgotten.
That is until a little more than a month ago, when Gelb’s daughter, Lani Abramson, decided it was time her father got his due.
“It was just all of the sudden,” she explained. “I heard him (discuss) the Purple Heart more (saying) ‘I wish I had it.’”
On Thursday, the Edwardsville resident finally was decorated with the U.S. military medal bestowed upon those injured in combat.
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Held at a much less hostile locale than the Western Front – the Wegmans food market in Wilkes-Barre Township – the medal presentation attracted a small crowd of family and curious onlookers, who intermittently approached Gelb to ogle his medal and shake his hand. Store manager Keith Grierson personally cut a specially made cake emblazoned with the Purple Heart emblem.
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“I’ll say to my wife (in the morning), ‘Where do you want to go?’ She’ll say, ‘You know where I want to go,’” Gelb said.
Whether it was the familiar setting or his personality, Gelb hardly wasted a second without retelling well-worn stories from his four years at war.
“I hated every day of it. I didn’t like the hike all the time. … I was always hungry.”
But he had an idea. He became friendly with the supply sergeant and lied that he had a restaurant back home. “That’s how I got to become a cook. I was never hungry after that.”
The presentation capped several years of work by Gelb’s family to restore his collection of military medals, many of which Gelb lost in the flooding caused by Tropical Storm Agnes in 1972. Jeff Isacson, the husband of Gelb’s daughter Gayle, had created a display for the medals, which included two Bronze Stars.
Asked what heroic act he performed to receive the highly prestigious stars, Gelb couldn’t remember.
“I did so many outstanding things. That’s why I’m still here.”
ON THE WEB
To see more photos from Sgt. Saul Gelb’s Purple Heart ceremony, log on to www.timesleader.com.
Rory Sweeney, a Times Leader staff writer, may be reached at 970-7418.
Labels: WWII
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