91-Year-Old WWII Vet Visits Town He Helped Liberate - Thanks to Virtual Reality

Frank Mouqué returned to the French town of Armentières, 72 years after he helped liberate it from the Nazis.

And he did it  without leaving the Royal Hospital Chelsea, a home for British army veterans, where the 91-year-old lives.

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Mouqué, wearing a virtual reality device, was serenaded by a group of local children, who sang him a nursery rhyme. Mayor Bernard Haesebroeck called the veteran a hero and awarded a medal of honor.

Mouqué readily remembers the Normandy invasion. “It was chaos. We were bombed, shelled, sniped, fired at, constantly,” he says in a video compiled by Twine, an online freelance network.

 “There were quite a lot of casualties. I lost a lot of my friends, one way or another,” he said.

He was a corporal in the 263 Field Company of the British Royal Engineer, tasked with laying and defusing mines and blowing up things including bridges.

On D-Day, he helped clear a path through a beach thick with landmines in advance of his fellow invaders.

His virtual reality experience was so much like real like, Mouqué was momentarily overcome.

“Fantastic!” he exclaimed, shaking his head. “I’m sorry, I’m just lost for words.”

Read: Singers Surprise World War II Vet With Emotional Tune: 'He Had Tears in His Eyes

He will treasure the medal, he said.

“I’m honored, on behalf of all of us who were there. I mean, I’m 91.

There’s still hundreds of us, but we’re a diminishing breed, aren’t we?

“On behalf of all the people who were with me, they would say thank you, too.” 

Watch: 90-Year-Old Vet Gets Diploma After Leaving School to Fight World War II 

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