Ike O'Noclassed
Well-Known Member
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I specifically made a very clear point of highlighting my personal respect for the actions of those that served in the first and second world wars. I solemnly observed a two minute silence on Monday and I ensured that my teenage daughter (with poppy) understood why she was doing the same at her school.
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This. For me it's always been the two minutes silence on Remembrance Sunday and a simpler acknowledgement on Armistice Day the 11th - and that's it. It has been thus ever since as a young child in the 1950s I recall being brought out from the Sunday morning chapel service to stand at the village war memorial and see what seemed to be very old men (WW1 veterans who would have been several years younger than the age I am now) standing to attention and openly weeping - which struck me as odd and incredibly upsetting - the Last Post was played and we dispersed. No palaver at all then.
I believe the ramping up of the Remembrance season started with the 40th anniversary D-Day celebrations in 1984. Reagan was seeking re-election, Thatcher was basking in the Falklands afterglow and it was claimed that it would be the last time the veterans would be able to take part before old age death and infirmity made such gatherings too difficult, rather than baser political motives!