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Remembrance Day
Date: 10 November, 2006
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'Regardless of your view on how they should
be remembered, these are sobering for us all.'
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This week is the time of remembrance
for those whose lives were lost in the world wars. What's the history
of this tradition?
By Andrew Chapman
In Britain, of course, the most famous ceremony
sees royalty and heads of church and state in rare harmony at the
Cenotaph
in Whitehall.
The monument was designed by Sir
Edwin Lutyens. This ceremony has taken place every year since
the stone memorial was unveiled in 1920. ('Cenotaph',
incidentally, literally means 'empty tomb'.)
The ceremony
actually takes place on Remembrance
Sunday, now a well-established part of the church
calendar, and founded in 1921.
The date was chosen as the closest Sunday to Armistice
Day (or Remembrance Day) - the actual date of the end of the
First
World War - 11am on the 11th November, 1918.
Many places hold two
minutes' silence at 11am, either on the Sunday or, if different,
Armistice Day itself.
In America, the day is known as Veterans'
Day. In all cases, the events commemorate the Second
World War, too - and provide an opportunity to honour all victims
of conflict.
In Britain, these occasions are also marked by an annual Poppy
Appeal by the Royal
British Legion, a charity looking after present and former members
of the Armed Forces.
The red
Flanders poppy was chosen as a symbol because it grew in the
field of France and Belgium where so many people lost their lives.
Wearing poppies has become a controversial
issue in recent years - although, in fact, the peace movement's
tradition
of wearing alternative poppies (such as white ones) actually
goes all the way back to the 1920s.
Many countries display a Roll of Honour in commemoration of those
who have died in global conflicts.
Some of them are now online, including those for Britain,
Australia,
Canada
and the United
States.
Regardless of your view on how they should be remembered, these
are sobering for us all.
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