Christmas Eve Service Commemorates WWII Soldiers
by U.S. Sandra Wilson, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux
December 24, 2022
Amid the World War II air raid warning
sirens and the heavy firing of U.S. anti-aircraft guns, the 1944
Christmas holiday arrived in a Maastricht marlstone quarry.
An estimated 280 U.S. Soldiers attended a midnight Catholic Mass in
the cave, put on by the Dutch Brothers (Brothers of the Immaculate
Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, or as the locals called them,
Brothers of De Beyart) as a small respite from the war.
Now, 78 years later, an annual Christmas
Eve service is still held to commemorate the historical event.
“We will never forget what happened in the Second World War and
what these boys did for us,” said Jons van Dooren, Chairman of the
Foundation of the Commemoration of the American Christmas
Celebration 1944.

Sgt. Jeremiah Hutchins, JFC Chapel religious affairs noncommissioned officer in charge (left) and Jons van Dooren, chairman of the Foundation of the Commemoration of the American Christmas Celebration 1944, discuss a wall signed by U.S. Soldiers 78 years ago in a quarry in Maastricht, the Netherlands, December 20, 2022. Approximately 280 Soldiers signed the wall following a Christmas Eve Mass at the location during World War II. (Photo by Sandra Wilson, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Public Affairs)
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The organization, in Dutch “Stichting
Herdenking Amerikaanse Kerstviering 1944,” or SHAK, is responsible
for coordinating the service each year. It has also welcomed some of
the 1944 Soldiers and Family members back to the cave more than half
a century later.
Robert Wisler, a Soldier from the 1944
Mass, returned to the Netherlands in 2014 to attend the 70th
commemorative Mass in the cave with 26 Family members in tow.
Robert, whose birthday falls on Christmas day, turned 20 at the
1944 Mass. In 2014 he celebrated his 90th birthday in the same cave.
His son, Don Wisler, explained that it took two years to
convince his father to make the trip, but the effort was well worth
it.
“The trip in 2014 was one of our most memorable
Christmases ever. [The Mass] was one of the only events of the war
that my dad would talk about,” said Don. “Some of the Soldiers never
returned home [from the war]. Some, like my dad, went on and lived
full lives and raised families.”
Robert spoke at the 70th
anniversary midnight Mass, recalling his assignment in 1944 as a
supply sergeant with the 154th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Operation, a
detachment of the Third Army’s 55th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade.
During December 1944, the unit’s operations were set up next to the
quarry where the service was held.

Robert Wisler gives a speech as Rita Hoefnagels listens
during the Commemoration of the American Christmas
Celebration 1944 in Maastricht, the Netherlands, December
24, 2014. Wisler attended the original Mass in 1944 when he
turned 20, and returned to the Netherlands 70 years later to
attend the commemorative service on his 90th birthday. (Courtesy photo given to Sandra Wilson, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Public Affairs.)
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“We were all very grateful that the
Brothers had organized this Mass,” said Robert. “All of us,
especially those on the front lines, were tired, cold, scared and
missing our homes and families.”
The Brothers had originally
planned a special breakfast after the Mass, but the continuous air
raid warning sirens limited access to resources. The Soldiers had to
depart quickly once the service concluded but not before they
enjoyed a mug of hot coffee with a spoon full of powdered sugar and
a doughnut.
Other memories of the original Mass have been
kept alive through Soldiers’ letters home to their relatives.
Joseph Gorman’s letters home during the war were saved by his
sister. She gave them to Gorman’s daughter, Marilou Gorman
McLaughlin, after he passed away from cancer in 1981.
In his
letter, Gorman wrote about the Mass and recalled how all the
Soldiers signed the cave wall before heading back out to war. The
wall had been smoothed and polished ahead of time by the Brothers,
with the intention of leaving memories of the Mass with charcoal.
 U.S. Army Soldiers sign a wall in the quarry after attending a 1944 Christmas Eve Mass, December 24, 1944. As many as 280 Soldiers attended the religious service in the midst of air raid siren warnings and heavy firing of U.S. anti-aircraft guns during World War II. (Courtesy photo given to Sandra Wilson, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Public Affairs.)
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Even though they never met, McLaughlin’s
nephew visited Maastricht in 2017 to learn about his grandfather’s
experiences in World War II.
“[My nephew] was able to find
my father’s signature,” said McLaughlin. “And he himself was able to
sign the wall which was an amazing experience for him.”
McLaughlin, too, hopes to visit the special site someday in memory
of her father’s service, and to experience the event that he spoke
about first-hand.
The commemoration of the 1944 midnight
Mass was first established in 1980 by a former member of the Dutch
Resistance, Charles Smitshuysen, when he became interested in the
quarry as a historic site.
In 1994, Smitshuysen and several
other former resistance fighters created the SHAK foundation in
order to formalize the yearly services.
Danny Janssen, the
driver’s testing station manager for USAG Benelux-Brunssum, has
attended the service at least 15 times over the years.
He
serves as an advisor to the SHAK committee, and has helped set up
the service, shuttle attendees to the cave and maintain the
connection between the organization and the U.S. Army throughout the
years.
He recalled how the commemorations when original
veterans returned to attend the service hold special significance to
him.
“I feel so humbled when I see these old veterans,” said
Janssen. “[The service] brings me back to the memory of the Soldiers
of 1944 and how they felt. I feel gratitude to them.”
The
commemorative service continued annually until 2007, when the quarry
was closed due to health and safety reasons. The first year it
reopened a snowy winter again canceled the service, and it wasn’t
until 2012 that the Christmas Eve Midnight Mass could resume.
This year’s Christmas Eve Mass will be the first one after
another two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the
setback, Van Dooren is excited to restart the annual tradition.
“We hope to be able to do this for a number of years [to come],”
said Van Dooren.
During his speech at the 2014 service,
Robert voiced his gratefulness to the SHAK committee for continuing
the remembrance service.
“Thank you for all your efforts through the years to commemorate
this Christmas Mass of 1944 that was so important to us back then,
and to keep alive the memory of those who served during the war,”
said Robert. “May it remind future generations of the sacrifices
made by generations past and inspire them to work even harder for
peace.”
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