World War Two veteran starts over at 104 after losing home in the Palisades fire. It came like a thief in the night, unannounced and ruthless. It wasn’t just Martin Copenhafer’s home that was taken. It was his history, his haven, and a lifetime of memories. Martin, who stared death in the face on D-Day, found himself standing in the aftermath of the ashes of his Malibu home, wrestling with the weight of starting over.
"I'm in shock, I'm still in shock," Martin shared, with the quiet resolve of someone who has seen much but never this. For 55 years, the walls of his home were more than a shelter—they were storytellers. They bore witness to decades of laughter, storms weathered, and the soft, steady rhythm of a life well-lived where he saw blessings upon blessings until flames turned them silent.
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The Pacific Palisades fire tore through Martin’s community with a merciless speed, “fanned by dry vegetation and unrelenting winds.” The blaze consumed over 23,000 acres, leaving heartbreak in its wake. “I look out the window and see embers,” Martin recalled, his voice steady but weighted. “So we grabbed what we could get quickly, in five minutes, threw it in the car, and just got out of there with the clothes on our back.”
This man survived the landing at Normandy, a hero honored with France’s Legion of Honor medal for his bravery. And yet, as Martin admitted, “I’d say this is a much worse disaster than anything I could conceive of.”
His niece Debbie put words to what so many who know Martin feel: “He would give you the shirt off his back, and my heart, it’s just broken over this fire and being displaced and all that’s gone on. It’s just horrible,” she commented.
There’s something almost sacred about how Martin carries himself—steady, unyielding, even as the storms rage. For his 100th birthday, his Malibu community came together to honor him. The following year, France itself stood in gratitude as Martin received its highest honor. And yet, when the fire swept through, Martin didn’t dwell on what he had lost.
Celebrating his birthday despite losing everything, he knows he’s starting a new chapter. “I have to start all over again in a new life,” he said, matter-of-factly. No bitterness, just a quiet acknowledgment of what is.
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Starting over isn’t new to Martin. He’s done it before, on battlefields and in moments when hope seemed like a distant dream. And now, at 104, he’s doing it again—moving to Sacramento to be closer to family. He won’t rebuild in Malibu; the process would take too long. But rebuilding isn’t just about hammer and nails. It’s about the spirit. And Martin’s spirit? It’s unshakable.
Maybe that’s the lesson in all of this—that life will take and take, but it cannot touch the depths of faith-filled courage forged in a heart like Martin’s. The kind of courage that survives wars, honors, and even fires. It’s the resilient kind that leans heavily on faith and hope.
As I write this, I wonder about the embers Martin saw that night and how they danced against the dark, fiery, and fleeting, holding just a glimmer of light before fading. But then there’s Martin—his faithful light is the kind that does not fade—a man who, even at 104, shows us how to rise from the ashes.
Maybe we all need some of Martin’s spirit—to stand steady, start again, and keep the light alive. Because that’s what real heroes do. And Martin Copenhafer? He’s the kind of battle-worn hero who teaches us all how to begin anew.
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Isaiah 43:2 "When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze."
h/t: People
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