Some of this history needs a bigger piece of popular attention. Some stories need to be told and re-told. Stories which tell of people overcoming uncommon hurdles are especially important. How do you tell the history of any airmen in WWII without talking about the Tuskeegee Airmen? How do you tell the story of any soldier's in WWII without visiting the racism, Jim Crow, and all the elaborate procedures to make a fighting outfit out of those who were, in effect, social outcasts? I for one would like to see a film about the Black Soldiers who voluntarily took reductions in pay grade in the ETO to go into infantry combat, and who were among the first combat soldiers to actually integrate and live in the same barracks as white soldiers (the experience of which led to integration in 1948). When the integration occurred, it wasn't just a snap of the fingers of a politician and everything was okay.
There was a story of Lena Horne, who went to entertain at a German POW camp. The camp commandant seated all the German POW's in the front rows, Black guards in the rear. Lena Horne walked out onto the stage, saw the seating arrangements, stepped down from the stage walked past the Germans to where the first US soldiers were seated, and then began to sing.
Is some of this history overblown? Like all legends, some myths arise to confuse some of the facts. Is it over-popular? Maybe, but it asks questions which still need asking. Will it eclipse the balance of WWII history which is already in existence? I doubt it- there is too much bravery in the common experience of WWII for contemporary spin to diminish. The issue is, that WWII was a common experience, black, white, brown, yellow, green. No matter what your color, you deserve your due.
FYI, a friend who helps us out in the 14th Liaison Squadron just started an organization which portrays the ETO black soldiers. Please take a look. Very interesting stories.
http://fifthplatoon.org