SafeSpeed wrote:
I'm going to go against the grain here and admit that I'm seriously uncomfortable with this 'remembrance' thing.
On the one hand I am truly grateful that we have been protected from evil dictators, but on the other hand I can't accept the glory of war aspects.
When our fighters are heroes to be remembered for their service, I cannot help but believe that such a position makes further wars with further death and destruction more likely, not less.
If something is to be remembered, surely it should be great evil, so that we might avoid it in future?
I think we learn from history. Oh - some of the past wars were perhaps not as noble or even nobly fought as we may like to think... but overall British warfare has been for sound reasons - the ones which gave us the initial reputation as fair minded and a reputation for justice in the first place. That alone requires remembrance and reminder. Let's see
Defences against the invading Spanish Armada. Our fight for our Church of England. (Makes no difference that this family have a Catholic history... we have traced back down the generations...apparently we have some fine chaps in the ancestry and quite a few

/.. well let's say some "felines" are "down under"

- "rebel" seems to be the dominant gene here

) - but let's say justified - country was being invaded and we rule the waves around our waters.
Napoleon? He had his beady little eyes on running our country as well. BOf alors .. he was really of Italian stock from Corsica by the way.. not really French

per one histroy book I read as a kid... think it was good ol' "Look and Learn"

Sure he gave the French a culture of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity and founded much of current French culture .. but our country had the right to defend its own culture and that of her allies at the time. The French have never really forgiven us

I fear ...
Later on .. I forget most of the stuff I learned for my O Level in History here .. all I can say is I enjoyed the History lessons - and did consider it for A Level and beyond... but I was more drawn to Physics and Maths .. but basically I recall reading about the Boer War.. preditary colonisation of Africa.. unifficatiion of Germany and Italy from principalities to united countries.. and I recall the teacher equating this to trying out the Ferrari on a test drive for power

( I guess the grammar school I attended had some really cool teachers

).. which ultimately ended in the First World War when the pressure cooker of various conflicts bust when the Austrian Arch Duke was murdered in Sarajevo. Potted version - there were so many other political arguments going on - the war which should have ended all wars because it was so
vicious in character and the first which involved civilians as well... too much to include in a short post..when there are literally volumes of exposes and other poignant first hand accounts since this war was C20 - with news reel footage.
Quote:
Haven't we grown enough and learned enough that we can use the UN properly to Police evil? Apparently not since we have done such harm in Iraq.
War just isn't healty. That's what needs to be remembered.
By remembering the very young men who died .. I think we all know in ourselves that we should try to avoid a war and attempt to resolve differences by peaceful means.. But.. wrong people slected for high offices and elected perhaps.. I have met our leader personally given the constituency on our patch . Basically a decent bloke to chat to .. and he chats back

in a freindly enough manner - but I will risk commenting that "not my ideal of a leader or prime minister" as I think he is more wanting to be liked than respected. We all had teachers like that ... On reflection I liked the teachers who made me respect them more than the ones who wanted me to like them

He comes across to me as the latter type.
Riggers wrote:
The whole point of remembrance Sunday is to reflect upon the sacrifices made by ordinary people in the face of evil. We remember that evil cannot be allowed to triumph
We wanted to remember the dead of 1914-1918.. the war to end all wars.
The treaties, punitive reparations and the world recession unfortunately led to adulatiion of men who at first appeared to steer the countries back to stablility - but who turned out to be completely power crazed - with one blaming the Jews who were by instinct financial whizzers for the great depression of the bust economy years. and the other just apparently power hungry... but both wanting to dominate Europe .. It led to the Second World War... obligations to defend ourselves and our Allies.
.. and quite soon after war declared - knowledge of absolute atrocities .. genocide.
If the ordinary German protested - consequences were dire. Try reading a novel by Hans Werner Richter.. (A fave book of the Swiss riff raff) "False Triumphs". The novel is quite a poignantly moving tale of brothers-in law caught up in a conflict. One is apathetic .. yet unwilling to botch a prowess in archery. The prize was a protrait of Hitler. His false triumph was winning the protrait and then being dictated to hanging the protrait. He had to place on wall oppsoite the marital bed and it rather put him off his nights of passion.. and the entire village paid homage to the portrait in his bedroom

The brother in law was a commusist .. a teacher .. lost his job.. managed to secure one in a school but was arrested again for calling Hitler an idiot.. (sound familiar..

)
His main false triumph though was surendering to the conquering Russians at the end of the war.. and getting arrested by them.. and subjected to a number of revenge attacks for atrocities committed on the Eastern Front.
It's a clever novel though.. there are a number of "false triumphs" for these ordinary German blokes caught up in a dictatorship not of their choosing... and I think rightly included on A Level exam options as the Swiss point out to me.
Another on the reading list is one which the Swiss have a particular bond as they have a pal distantly related to the family involved in the horrendously true story.
The White Rose Group. Augsburg based "rebels"
. The White Rose leaders. were medical students who refused to join Hitler Youth and tried to alert the German in the street about the atrocious goings on in the death camps. They were guillotined in Strasbourg .. garotted with piano wire in Hamburg.. they were only 24 and 22 years old at the time. There is aroad by the Rhine in Strasbourg called ... "la rose blanche." It is close to where the Scholl family of Augsburg were murdered by the Nazis in 1941.
Oh.. what was their crime? Oh yes.. They distributed some leaflets which informed the average German of what really was happening to the Jews, the gypsies, the Muslims, the non Aryans.. the frail, disabled.. the people a civilised country should care for and protect and serve.
They told the truth about the false statistics being bandied around at the time. They were beheaded in Strasbourg and fellow members of their group across Germany literally garroted with piano wire.
Remembrance Sunday.. held across EU and Austria and Germany who call it a day of attonement and deep regret. It's about remebering all who died in the two main wars of the last century as well as those who died in more recent conflicts ..whetehr we agree with the current debacle in Iraq or not.. our armed forces do not have the luxury of choice in the matter and their very premature deaths should be remembered - but not with pride.. with some horror as well. So I wear two poppies .,. a red one and a white one as I wish to show proud remembrance and my debt for the past soldieres who fought for my right to freedom of speech - and a very sad remembrance for those I really think died for the vanity of some foreign politician. Remember.. those who fought the tyrants lost their lives so that I and my fellow equal law abiding citizens in this land could enjoy freedom of speech .. right to express an opinion without fear of dire reprisal -but that freedom means that I do not and should not resort to insult, libel, offence and foul language .. but express a view without causing offence nor being subjected to such offence. No pee cee nonsense .. but courtesy
Riggers who as usual says the common sense we all think wrote:
Unfortunately it has become passe in recent years to mischeviously and insidiously misinterpret the rememberance as a glorification of war - it is absolutely no such thing.
Fortunately for us, our countrymen died protecting the feeedoms that permit people to completely misunderstand and even maliciously contort the meaning behind the remembrance of the ultimate sacrifice they made, and voice their views without fear of retribution against themselves or their families.
The Greatest Gift God gave us is
'Remembrance'
"They shall not grow old,
As we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them,
Nor the years condemn,
At the going down of the sun
And in the morning
We will remember them"
