Friday 11 November 2011

We Will Remember Them.


World War I – known at the time as “The Great War” - officially ended when the Treaty of Versailles was signed on June 28, 1919, in the Palace of Versailles outside the town of Versailles, France. However, fighting ceased seven months earlier when an armistice, or temporary cessation of hostilities, between the Allied nations and Germany went into effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.

For that reason, November 11, 1918, is generally regarded as the end of “the war to end all wars.”

We must remember that this is also a day on which millions of people enter a quiet meditative state around the world to remember the start of peace at the end of WWI, at exactly 11AM. This not a simple coincidence but an engineered artefact of global history. Someone choose the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11 month as a time that required people going quiet and thinking of peace. Was this to harness energy on some special event in the future?

In Barbados, Remembrance Day, unlike some parts of the world, is not a public holiday. It is recognized as November 11, but the parade and ceremonial events are carried out on Remembrance Sunday. The day is observed to recognize the Barbadian soldiers who died fighting in the First and Second World Wars.

However, when speaking to my teenage daughter about Remembrance Day I realized that it held very little significance for her. In fact she didn’t even know what it meant. I vividly remember the Roll of Honour 1 & 2, of the fallen being read off the plaques on the School Hall in a special morning ceremony at the Lodge School every Remembrance Day, beginning with the reciting of the Ode of Remembrance:-

They went with songs to the battle, they were young.
Straight of limb, true of eyes, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted,
They fell with their faces to the foe.

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.


How many schools today bother to observe the traditions and teach the stories that have shaped the lives of my generation. I was still at the Lodge School when I first heard the story of The Unknown Warrior from the late, Capt. Carol Mapp. Capt. Mapp was a chemistry teacher at the Lodge School and the Officer in charge of No.2 Cadet Company, of which I was a proud member. Fortunately for me, a few years later, the then Major Mapp was Barbados’s Military Attache in London when I was an Officer Cadet at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. At my request, Major Mapp arranged for me to visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and the museum in Westminster Abbey. And to this day I can say that it was one of the most awesome and soul fulfilling occasions of my life.

The British tomb of The Unknown Warrior holds an unidentified British soldier killed on a European battlefield during the First World War. He was buried in Westminster Abbey, London on 11 November 1920, simultaneously with a similar internment of a French unknown soldier at the Arc de Triomphe in France, making both tombs the first to honour the unknown dead of the First World War.

The idea of a Tomb of the Unknown Warrior was first conceived in 1916 by the Reverend David Railton, who, while serving as an army chaplain on the Western Front, had seen a grave marked by a rough cross, which bore the pencil-written legend 'An Unknown British Soldier'.
He wrote to the Dean of Westminster in 1920 proposing that an unidentified British soldier from the battlefields in France be buried with due ceremony in Westminster Abbey "amongst the kings" to represent the many hundreds of thousands of Empire dead. The idea was strongly supported by the Dean and the then Prime Minister David Lloyd George.

Arrangements were placed in the hands of Lord Curzon of Kedleston who prepared in committee the service and location. Suitable remains were exhumed from various battlefields and brought to the chapel at Ste Pol near Arras, France on the night of 7 November 1920. The bodies were received by Rev George Kendall OBE. Brigadier General L.J. Wyatt and Lieutenant Colonel E.A.S. Gell of the Directorate of Graves Registration and Enquiries went into the chapel alone. The remains were on stretchers each covered by Union Flags: the two officers did not know from which battlefield any individual body had come. General Wyatt with closed eyes rested his hand on one of the bodies. The two officers placed the body in a plain coffin and sealed it. The other bodies were then taken away for reburial by Rev Kendall.

The coffin stayed at the chapel overnight and on the afternoon of November 8, it was transferred under guard and escorted by Rev Kendall, with troops lining the route, from Ste Pol to the medieval castle within the ancient citadel at Boulogne. A company from the French 8th Infantry Regiment, recently awarded the Légion d'Honneur en masse, stood vigil overnight. The following morning, two undertakers entered the castle library and placed the coffin into a casket of the oak timbers of trees from Hampton Court Palace. The casket was banded with iron and a medieval crusader's sword, chosen by the king personally from the Royal Collection, was affixed to the top and surmounted by an iron shield bearing the inscription 'A British Warrior who fell in the Great War 1914-1918 for King and Country'.

The casket was then placed onto a French military wagon, drawn by six black horses. At 10.30 am, all the church bells of Boulogne tolled; the massed trumpets of the French cavalry and the bugles of the French infantry played Aux Champs (the French "Last Post"). Then, the mile-long procession – led by one thousand local schoolchildren and escorted by a division of French troops – made its way down to the harbour.
At the quayside, Marshal Foch saluted the casket before it was carried up the gangway of the destroyer, HMS Verdun, and piped aboard with an admiral's call. The Verdun slipped anchor just before noon and was joined by an escort of six battleships. As the flotilla carrying the casket closed on Dover Castle it received a 19-gun Field Marshal's salute. It was landed at Dover Marine Railway Station at the Western Docks on 10 November. The body of the Unknown Warrior was carried to London in South Eastern and Chatham Railway General Utility Van No.132. The van has been preserved by the Kent and East Sussex Railway. The train went to Victoria Station, where it arrived at platform 8 at 8.32 pm that evening and remained overnight. (A plaque at Victoria Station marks the site: every year on 10 November, a small Remembrance service takes place between platforms 8 and 9.)

On the morning of 11 November 1920, the casket was placed onto a gun carriage of the Royal Horse Artillery and drawn by six horses through immense and silent crowds. As the cortege set off, a further field marshal's salute was fired in Hyde Park. The route followed was Hyde Park Corner, The Mall, and to Whitehall where the Cenotaph, a "symbolic empty tomb", was unveiled by King-Emperor George V. (The Cenotaph in Barbados was built 5 years later in 1925).The cortège was then followed by the king, the Royal Family and ministers of state to Westminster Abbey, where the casket was borne into the West Nave of the Abbey flanked by a guard of honour of one hundred recipients of the Victoria Cross.

The guests of honour were a group of about one hundred women. They had been chosen because they had each lost their husband and all their sons in the war. "Every woman so bereft who applied for a place got it".
The coffin was then interred in the far western end of the nave, only a few feet from the entrance, in soil brought from each of the main battlefields, and covered with a silk pall. Servicemen from the armed forces stood guard as tens of thousands of mourners filed silently past. The ceremony appears to have served as a form of catharsis for collective mourning on a scale not previously known.

The grave was then capped with a black Belgian marble stone (the only tombstone in the Abbey on which it is forbidden to walk) featuring this inscription, composed by Dean Ryle, Dean of Westminster, engraved with brass from melted down wartime ammunition:

BENEATH THIS STONE RESTS THE BODY
OF A BRITISH WARRIOR
UNKNOWN BY NAME OR RANK
BROUGHT FROM FRANCE TO LIE AMONG
THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS OF THE LAND
AND BURIED HERE ON ARMISTICE DAY
11 NOV: 1920, IN THE PRESENCE OF
HIS MAJESTY KING GEORGE V
HIS MINISTERS OF STATE
THE CHIEFS OF HIS FORCES
AND A VAST CONCOURSE OF THE NATION
THUS ARE COMMEMORATED THE MANY
MULTITUDES WHO DURING THE GREAT
WAR OF 1914 - 1918 GAVE THE MOST THAT
MAN CAN GIVE LIFE ITSELF
FOR GOD
FOR KING AND COUNTRY
FOR LOVED ONES HOME AND EMPIRE
FOR THE SACRED CAUSE OF JUSTICE AND
THE FREEDOM OF THE WORLD
THEY BURIED HIM AMONG THE KINGS BECAUSE HE
HAD DONE GOOD TOWARD GOD AND TOWARD
HIS HOUSE
Around the main inscription are four texts:
THE LORD KNOWETH THEM THAT ARE HIS (top)
UNKNOWN AND YET WELL KNOWN, DYING AND BEHOLD WE LIVE (side)
IN CHRIST SHALL ALL BE MADE ALIVE (base)
GREATER LOVE HATH NO MAN THAN THIS (side)


All of us can recall moments in our lives that help define us. Moments that we knew changed us. For reasons I have not ever fully understood, this story had a profound impact on my life and the direction I wanted it to take. This story was told to a number of us that Friday afternoon beneath the majestic Cabbage Palms that bordered the junior field. Capt. Mapp was in a rare talkative mood. Never before or since had he taken the time to talk to us in that way. I do not recall the names of the other lads that listened with me that afternoon and I cannot say how it effected them but I hope that they were somehow inspired as I was.

As I write this the clock on my computer has ticked passed midnight and the date now reads 11/11/11. Today at 11:11am as I pause in my busy day to observe two (2) minutes of silence in remembrance of all the soldiers who have given their lives, not only in the two World Wars but in the many conflicts since, it will be my solemn wish that our generation will not neglect our responsibility to instill into our children a sense of duty to country. How can they appreciate the freedoms they enjoy if they are not aware of the sacrifices that were made for them? Concepts like honour, dedication, perseverance, devotion, duty,faithfulness, fealty, obedience, obligation, must again be taught by the personal example of our leaders, parents, teachers and role models. In this month of remembrance and independence I will close with the words of Henry Ward Beecher:-

“A thoughtful mind, when it sees a Nation's flag, sees not the flag only, but the Nation itself; and whatever may be its symbols, its insignia, he reads chiefly in the flag the Government, the principles, the truths, the history which belongs to the Nation that sets it forth.”

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