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Memory, Sacrifice and War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

There are many reasons why Remembrance Day has to be taken seriously, especially by those among us who are wholly opposed to war. If we feel that we cannot join in the play as it is staged, we need to appreciate why others do, and why departures from the script—white poppies, public figures wearing duffel-coats—may seem to them like a desecration.

One reason is that Remembrance Day is not simply an occasion for private grief. It is a ritual enactment of our national story about peace—how it was won at immense cost by a whole generation of young men in 1914-18; how it was snatched from the jaws of defeat in 1940 by the bravery of the few. It recalls the sacrifice of two generations of youth who gave their lives so that we could live in safety, especially the women and children. It is meant to recall the story of our salvation as a people, in the sense of our national liberation from tyranny and fear. It is meant to acknowledge the sacrifices that ensured it. It gives meaning to the bloodshed. Remembrance makes private grief tolerable by connecting it with national salvation.

If war itself usually creates strong feelings of solidarity, the aftermath of wars is always a time of doubt and division. The Remembrance ceremony has been part of the apparatus for coping with this. After the Great War the nation was seriously divided, especially as between those who had experienced life in the trenches and those who had not.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1990 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Even so, not all ex‐soldiers found the annual ceremonies acceptable, and on Armistice Day 1921, thousands of unemployed marched towards the Cenotaph with pawn tickets instead of medals. Wilkinson, Alan, The Church of England and the First World War, SPCK 1978, p 305Google Scholar.

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