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Today is Remembrance Day here in Canada (and a variety of other, similar, days world wide[note]except in the states where it's Veteran's Day and Memorial Day takes away half the function and in New Zealand/Australia where ANZAC day is the more important holiday[note]).
And I've noticed that a lot more hype seems to be coming from the fact that it's the eleventh day of the eleventh month of the eleventh year [note]"Happy 11/11/11, y'all!" [note] than is being given to remembering the anniversary of the end of the first world war, and the sacrifices of those in the multitude of wars as a result of that war and following it (and really, most of the wars to the present day continue to have been resulted at least in part by the first world war). And that makes me kind of sad.
So I was wondering if any of you have plans for the day? Or any thing you regularly do as an act of remembrance? Do any of you wear a poppy this time of year [note]though I did read an interesting article about the politicization of the poppy in Canada and how that has caused some people to refuse to wear it anymore in remembrance[note]?
Personally, I've worn a poppy through the week and have been reviewing WWI/WWII stuff. I've also started to look in to how I can get my papa's (great grandfather's) WWII military information from the government. He died while I was still too young to ask him about what he did and what the war was like for him, and talking to family members he hated talking about the war and told them all different things that he supposedly did [note]one great aunt was told that he was a prison guard in Belgium, I think my grandma was told he drove officers around in the French campaigns, somebody else was told something different - and it makes me highly suspicious [note]. So now that he's gone I'd like to find out what I can some of the only ways that are available to me. [note]Though the government seems to like making things a hard time, too. [note]
I also think I'm going to make my way down to City Hall today and attend the Remembrance Day ceremony at the cenotaph[note]Interesting thing about our cenotaph: It was moved from one part of town to City Hall, but when it was moved to City Hall (block by block) they reassembled it backwards. There's a plaque on it talking about its symbolisms and how the cross with the sword inlaid on it for the greatest sacrifice known to man and the sacrifice of the soldiers is 'facing the rising sun' but that side is totally facing west now, the setting sun. Fail quail.[note]
I've also started reading some wartime poetry. Every Canadian probably knows "In Flanders Fields" off by heart, and at least the Ode of Remembrance from "For the Fallen" but I found the poetic response to "In Flanders Fields" in "We Shall Keep the Faith" and the history behind that poem equally interesting, as well as the complete text of other poems which we've generally just butchered for our own purposes.
In Flanders Fields
We Shall Keep the Faith
For the Fallen
And I've noticed that a lot more hype seems to be coming from the fact that it's the eleventh day of the eleventh month of the eleventh year [note]"Happy 11/11/11, y'all!" [note] than is being given to remembering the anniversary of the end of the first world war, and the sacrifices of those in the multitude of wars as a result of that war and following it (and really, most of the wars to the present day continue to have been resulted at least in part by the first world war). And that makes me kind of sad.
So I was wondering if any of you have plans for the day? Or any thing you regularly do as an act of remembrance? Do any of you wear a poppy this time of year [note]though I did read an interesting article about the politicization of the poppy in Canada and how that has caused some people to refuse to wear it anymore in remembrance[note]?
Personally, I've worn a poppy through the week and have been reviewing WWI/WWII stuff. I've also started to look in to how I can get my papa's (great grandfather's) WWII military information from the government. He died while I was still too young to ask him about what he did and what the war was like for him, and talking to family members he hated talking about the war and told them all different things that he supposedly did [note]one great aunt was told that he was a prison guard in Belgium, I think my grandma was told he drove officers around in the French campaigns, somebody else was told something different - and it makes me highly suspicious [note]. So now that he's gone I'd like to find out what I can some of the only ways that are available to me. [note]Though the government seems to like making things a hard time, too. [note]
I also think I'm going to make my way down to City Hall today and attend the Remembrance Day ceremony at the cenotaph[note]Interesting thing about our cenotaph: It was moved from one part of town to City Hall, but when it was moved to City Hall (block by block) they reassembled it backwards. There's a plaque on it talking about its symbolisms and how the cross with the sword inlaid on it for the greatest sacrifice known to man and the sacrifice of the soldiers is 'facing the rising sun' but that side is totally facing west now, the setting sun. Fail quail.[note]
I've also started reading some wartime poetry. Every Canadian probably knows "In Flanders Fields" off by heart, and at least the Ode of Remembrance from "For the Fallen" but I found the poetic response to "In Flanders Fields" in "We Shall Keep the Faith" and the history behind that poem equally interesting, as well as the complete text of other poems which we've generally just butchered for our own purposes.
In Flanders Fields
We Shall Keep the Faith
For the Fallen