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I was thinking about Remembrance Sunday after seeing an old piece of mine created on that theme in my FB memories. I was going to update that piece but then started a new one and ended up with this!
The poppy, obviously, with script representing all the letters home from the soldiers to their loved ones. There's actually a field of poppies photo blended into the background, but made it deliberately abstracty so it could also be reminiscent of fire burning around the buildings suggested in the b/g. It's not at all what I intended but it's where I ended up lol :)
TFL!
C'est une tradition centenaire à laquelle les Britanniques sont profondément attachés. Ce coquelicot, appelé aussi « poppy » par les Anglais, symbolise la guerre des tranchées et les centaines de milliers de soldats qui ont laissé leur vie au combat.
A small shrine in a beautiful location overlooking the volcanic caldera in Santorini.
In remembrance of my work colleague Chris Burscough who sadly passed away on the 17th November. He was a gentle man as well as a gentleman who brightened the lives of all who met him. He will be sorely missed by all of us at NJSR Architects.
A Solitary Remembrance
For someone born in 1858 living nearly 98 eight years was a very long life indeed. This solitary stone in this small, out of the way cemetery, forgotten by many and unknown by most is a simple remembrance yet just as stately as the largest mausoleum.
Charles C. Ritter's life ended just 4 years after mine began. What will be my memorial? I'm fairly certain it won't be a mighty public edifice nor a stately classical mausoleum. Without children I leave no one behind to carry my DNA into the future or tend a simple grave like this. If my plans to be cremated are carried out there will be no physical place to mark my existence. Though I have written words and created images, I doubt either are remarkable enough to stand the test of time. So, what will be left behind in my remembrance when I shuffle off this mortal coil? I hope that those whose lives I have touched will occasionally remember me with fondness. That will be enough.
Brampton Cumbria
Brampton Remembrance Parade from 2012 to 2024 here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/collections/721576375...
I finished the day with a stop over at the Burnsland Cemetery... It was a disappointing day photographically, with way too many missed opportunities, I felt rather snake bitten for the day... But I still met some interesting people along the way so...
This year I attended the small ceremony held at the Burnsland Cemetary, first time I've been to this particular ceremony...
Remembrance Day - 11:11:11
Honouring the bravery and sacrifice of all the women and men whose lives have been lost or forever changed while fighting for our freedom and serving our country.
“Lest We Forget.”
A black and white poppy edit for Remembrance Sunday 2018.
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Sacaton West Cemetery, Gila River Tribal Community. This remembrance was hanging on one of the boundary fences.
For my video; youtu.be/985JuLkHZP8
Uploaded exactly 12 years ago to the day since the photo was taken.
South Burnaby Remembrance Day ceremony at the Cenotaph in the park at the corner of Jubilee Street and Nelson Avenue.
Lest we forget,
Bonsor Park, Metrotown, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Remembrance Day (also known as Poppy Day owing to the tradition of wearing a remembrance poppy) is a memorial day observed in Commonwealth member states since the end of the First World War to honour armed forces members who have died in the line of duty. The day is also marked by war remembrances in several other non-Commonwealth countries. In most countries, Remembrance Day is observed on 11 November to recall the end of First World War hostilities. Hostilities ended "at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month" of 1918, in accordance with the armistice signed by representatives of Germany and the Entente between 5:12 and 5:20 that morning. ("At the 11th hour" refers to the passing of the 11th hour, or 11:00 am.) The First World War formally ended with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919.
The Unknown Soldier
Poppies of Remembrance on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the National War Memorial in Ottawa, Canada. Here lies one of Canada's fallen from the Western Front of World War I.
They were my Poppies. Lest we forget.
Photo by: Michael P. Kopack
Copyright 2023
"They shall grow not 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."
- from "For the Fallen" a poem by Robert Laurence Binyon (1869-1943), published in The Times newspaper on 21 September 1914.
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I've been to the Tomb of the American Unknown Soldier at Arlington many times and seen the moving, somber ceremonies. I think I prefer the Canadian Tomb though. He lies at the foot of the National War Memorial, accessible to everyone. The day I took this picture, I was the only one there (it was a breezy 23°F) so I sat down next to his grave and talked to him and thought about his sacrifice and that of so many others. To me, he's *one of us*, not someone to be protected away behind guards, like an exhibit in a museum.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Posed spontaneous portrait from Glasgow, Scotland. After capturing a candid I asked for a portrait from this guy in his superb World War I medic uniform. I loved the juxtaposition with the graffiti too - an 'expression' of freedom for which so many fought and died to protect.
My dad taught me the importance of remembrance for the sacrifices of war by taking me to the Remembrance Sunday ceremony every year as a child. Today I will be remembering those that fought for freedom and democracy together with remembering my dad and his reverence and respect for that remembrance.
Lest we forget.
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Practicing positive remembrance- missing the things I've left behind but not with too much sorrow. Looking hopefully for the new people/places/things that are becoming part of my life.
From a recent (and awesome) instameet.
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remembrance_Day
"May every Sunrise hold more Promise and every Sunset hold more Peace" ~ Anon.
At the 11th hour on the 11th day of the 11th month....we will remember them. I think it disgusting that FIFA has banned the England and Scotland football teams from wearing poppies, the symbol of Remembrance, when they play their first international game against each other since 1999 at Wembley on Friday 11th November. In remembrance of all those who made the ultimate sacrifice, FIFA should remember that amongst those who died were thousands of football fans, thousands who enjoyed playing football and even many professional players. Britain is sick of being told what it can and can't do by ignorant foreigners who don't even recognise the contribution that Commonwealth soldiers made in giving them freedom from fascism. Only for FIFA to operate their own fascism. And they have the cheek to suggest the Remembrance poppy is a political symbol. F--K FIFA Fascists.
I popped out of work at lunch time to grab a shot of the carved soldier memorial outside the Victory hall in Mobberley village, Cheshire. Someone had hoisted the flag with the words, "Lest we forget"
The poppy--long a symbol of sleep, peace, and death--has also, since World War I, been a symbol of remembrance of soldiers lost in wars.
remember ... and learn. No more war. Never!! Peace!!
Safe this planet - safe our lifes and the life of the following generations!
seen in Folkestone, England
“They shall grow not 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.”
For today, I took a photo of 2 French postcards which my grandad sent home to his young family during World War I. Despite injuries, he was one of the lucky ones who survived the war & eventually returned home - but many of his friends didn’t.
“We will remember them”
Remembrance Day is a memorial day observed in Commonwealth member states since the end of the First World War to honour armed forces members who have died in the line of duty. Following a tradition inaugurated by King George V in 1919, the day is also marked by war remembrances in many non-Commonwealth countries.
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Le jour du Souvenir est une journée commémorative observée dans les États membres du Commonwealth depuis la fin de la Première Guerre mondiale pour honorer les membres des forces armées décédés dans l'exercice de leurs fonctions. Suivant une tradition inaugurée par le roi George V en 1919, la journée est également marquée par des souvenirs de guerre dans de nombreux pays non membres du Commonwealth.
Our village war memorial on Remembrance Sunday, wreaths were placed and poppy crosses signed by the local school children in Honour and remembrance of our village fallen in both world wars, St. Mary's church, Dymock Village, Gloucestershire.
Poppies on the Bathgate Pyramids by the side of the M8 motorway, Scotland.
To those idiot students who hide their heads in hoods and faces behind masks and burn Police cars and damage property in protest about a rise in student fees, please realise that things in this world have a cost. As immature beings you may have got used to anyone and everyone else, whether it be your parents or the State paying for your existence. You may think it right that you waste your time and the expense of educating you at University, gaining a degree that you don't use. You may think it your right to protest and complain that you should be held to account for the expense of your education. After all you have the right to do anything you like: it's a free country, isn't it?
But please use your selfish little brains to appreciate that there is a cost for all these things.
The poppies you see people wearing are not a celebration of war. They are a symbol of remembrance for the hundreds of thousands of men who fought to defend the freedom of our land. They were men from a time when people respected their nation, respected it's authorities, the Laws and the Police. They didn't protest when sent to defend their country, even at a terrible cost. For they paid to give today's students the freedom they enjoy with their lives.
It's important we remember that sacrifice and point out to today's youth how fortunate they are.
On the morning of 13 November, a first bunch of flowers on the railing of a park on the Boulevard Richard-Lenoir opposite Bataclan, site of the biggest of the coordinated terrorist attacks in Paris ten years earlier.
It is Remembrance Day in Canada. A time to remember the sacrifice of Canada's soldiers of, primarily, the last century. I've included a link that I have probably included before, but, here it is. The 3 PPCLI is my nephew's unit. He is a major, and did one tour in Afghanistan when he was a lieutenant. (Pronounced "leff-tenant in Canada) Every time I watch this video, I tear up. I showed it in French class today, after our Remembrance Day service. The helmet is a Canadian WWII model, made in London, Ontario, and is not a replica.