Acts of Remembrance
So here we are again. Once more it’s Remembrance Sunday, an occasion to remember those who have given their lives in conflicts past and present. This is always held on the second Sunday in November in the United Kingdom, so that it is close to the date of anniversary of the armistice that formally ended the First World War, on 11th November 1918. Another way to commemorate this is the observance of two minutes’ silence at 11am on 11th November itself. I plan to do that, this Wednesday (which is the 11th November). In fact, I shall be in the middle of a PhD examination in Edinburgh at that time, so I hope the candidate and the internal examiner don’t object! It is, however, one of the very few things that I’m not willing to compromise about.
Another is the wearing of a poppy. The poppy appeal raises money for veterans and their families, but the wearing of these little red paper flowers is something that not everyone feels comfortable with. Some people think that to wear a poppy is to celebrate militarism or even Britain’s imperialist past. I don’t see it that way at all. If someone asked me to wear a badge to support Britain’s participation in the invasion of Iraq, I’d certainly refuse, in fact.
I wrote about my reaction to the horror and futility of war about this time last year, so I’ll try not to repeat myself except to say that, to me, the poppy is not about celebrating war or military prowess, it’s simply about remembering those who died. In fact, one of the main reasons the paraphernalia of Remembrance Day observances (the poppy, the cenotaph, the tomb of the unknown soldier, and all that) were set up in the first place was to remind not just people but also governments of the devastation caused byWorld War One. That’s why the Remembrance Day ceremonial laying of wreaths takes place in Whitehall, right at the heart of government. The ritual was specifically intended to be a warning to the politicians who had brought the conflict about not to allow it to happen again.
As a young lefty student I grappled with the implications of the poppy appeal. The Peace Pledge Union produces white poppies, as an overtly anti-war symbol of remembrance. For a time I wore a white poppy but, although I am against war, I don’t think a policy of non-violence would have helped much against the Nazis and therefore can’t really call myself an out-and-out pacifist. One year I wore both white and red poppies, but since then I’ve decided to stick with a red one.
Of course many in the Establishment would like the poppy to turn into a symbol of obedience, a kind of alternative national flag. Some people choose not to wear it precisely for that reason. The sight of some hypocritical warmongerers wearing the poppy at the Cenotaph on these occasions sickens me, but their betrayal does not make me want to stop wearing it myself. Neither does the fact that our politicians seem content to give away the freedoms that so many died to protect.
Some poppy sellers use the slogan Wear Your Poppy With Pride, but the original meaning is much better expressed by the original, Lest We Forget. I’m not sure I wear mine with pride at all, in fact. What I feel is really more like shame, at the wastefulness and stupidity of armed conflict. I count myself incredibly lucky that I have never had to live through anything like that, not only because I’ve had a peaceful and comfortable life, but also because I have never been tested in the way previous generations were. I wear the poppy to acknowledge their bravery and to recognize my own good fortune.
On Friday evening I went with a bunch of Cardiff astronomers to a pub near the department for a couple of pints, as at the end of most weeks. For a while we talked about poppies and their meaning. Some of us were wearing them, some weren’t. Various views were aired. One view was that it they saw the poppy as supporting the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Others expressed distaste for the fact that the poppy had become a kind of meaningless fashion accessory, or that wearing it had become compulsory, at least for newsreaders and other TV celebrities. Another pointed out that the last British veterans of the Great War, Harry Patch and Henry Allingham both died earlier this year, within a few days of each other, and that made the poppy irrelevant.
I respect these points of view, but don’t agree with them. I think the fact that there are no living survivors of the trenches makes it more, not less, important to remember those that died. It’s not just about the First World War anyway. Nor is it just about servicemen. When I stand for the two minutes silence I remember those all who fell fighting on all sides of all wars, and fallen civilians too.
I didn’t support the invasions of Iraq or Afghanistan and I don’t understand what the continued presence of British soldiers in such places is supposed to be achieving other than more death. But why should the dead of Helmand 2009 deserve less respect than those of Flanders 1917? I wear the poppy for them, not for the fools that sent them there.
When the newsreader Jon Snow decided not to wear a poppy on TV a few years ago, there were angry complaints. I’m sure he didn’t mean disrespect to the cause but disliked the pressure being put on him to conform. I can see his point. It has to be voluntary if it is to mean anything at all. I would probably refuse to wear a poppy myself if someone tried to make it compulsory. But in the end I agree with Euan Ferguson’s piece in today’s Observer. The picture shows a bunch of the contestants from X-factor (which is, apparently, a popular television programme) all wearing poppies.

Ferguson writes
I recall a time, it seems just – just! – about 20 years ago, presumably around the time most of these X Factor contestants were crying their first (but by no means their last) tears, that anyone handing the stroppy younger me a poppy would be met with mystification and reluctance, as if they were offering me a cormorant. Although it’s possible the group in this photograph was suitably “advised” for their very public trip to the West End premiere of A Christmas Carol, the many under-20s stopping outside London’s King’s Cross to buy poppies last week from squaddies suggests a real change of attitude. Gone are the sulky, rebellious, anti-poppy teens of old, now seeming as distant as CND marches.
The young appear not only proud to wear them, but are almost using them as accessories: here, oversized, silky, something even of a statement. Elsewhere, there’s the tasteful option of those rather fine little enamel badges. I’ve seen people take out the little green paper foliage and opt for the simple scarlet. Sarah Brown managed to attract criticism for sporting an extra large one.
Is it all healthy? Well, I don’t like pressure being put on people to conform. Orthodoxy and fear are always to be regretted and today’s society is over-condemnatory, swift to its manufactured outrage. But this change seems to have come from below, not been ordered by bullies: the daily reports of life and death in the forces, of the danger other 20-year-olds daily find themselves facing. And is the symbolism of the poppy being degraded as it is customised? No. You can’t do much to the fabulous simplicity of this symbol. And the poppy doesn’t preach: it’s not about “right” or “wrong” wars, but about brave dead soldiers. And the message was, never, Remember in the way we tell you to remember. It is, simply, Lest We Forget.

November 8, 2009 at 5:37 pm
Nice article Peter, I agree with just about everything and would add almost nothing; thank you.
Anton
November 8, 2009 at 6:04 pm
We should never forget.
November 8, 2009 at 6:19 pm
What a bizarre world! Those whom you regard as freedom fighters are criminals to me. The news that saddens you every day makes me happy! Perhaps on Wednesday you can spare a moment to remember the nations which were ruined by the British. And these nations are indeed large in number, larger than the Brits who have f.. fallen in the battles.
November 8, 2009 at 7:19 pm
On Wednesday I will “remember those all who fell fighting on all sides of all wars, and fallen civilians too”. I am no Imperialist, as any reading of this piece would make clear to anyone not blinded by hatred. That is, if they bothered to read it before commenting.
November 8, 2009 at 7:29 pm
Spot on Peter. Both my Grandfathers fought in WWII, with one being a prisoner of war for four years, ruining his health, and ultimately leading to an early death. It’s important to me to remember them, and to remember the countless others on all sides of all conflicts who lose their lives. As you say, one can respect them without supporting the idiots whose decisions lead to wars.
November 9, 2009 at 2:53 am
It’s always about the people who die. No matter what the ideals or causes happen to be. It’s always about the people who have died, and suffered.
I find it hard to imagine how anyone could even smile, when wearing such a symbol.
November 9, 2009 at 9:34 am
@k Angel: Victorian historians saw the British Empire as 100% wonderful, post-1960s historians often see it is 100% terrible, buut I think it was a paradox: it was won and maintained by force or its threat (which is unjustifiable), yet it did a lot of good. Lawrence James’ outstanding history of the Empire is written out of that tension and it concludes with a quote from Nelson Mandela: “I was brought up in a British school, and at the time Britain was the home of everything that was best in the world… the home of parliamentary democracy and, as people fighting against a form of tyrrany in this country, we look upon Britain to take an active interest to support us in our fight against apartheid.”
Any evaluation of the British Empire must also take into account the lot of the common people in a land BEFORE the coming of the Redcoats.
Anton
November 9, 2009 at 11:21 am
Thanx alot for this post
مدونة
November 9, 2009 at 11:57 am
Phillip,
The poppy was chosen as a symbol of remembrance because of John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders Fields”:
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved, and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
The poem was written after John McCrae witnessed the death, and presided over the funeral, of a friend, Lt. Alexis Helmer. The poppies referred to in the poem grew in profusion in Flanders in the spoiled earth of the battlefields and cemeteries where war casualties were buried.
Peter
November 9, 2009 at 12:39 pm
I think the point is that dormant poppy seeds are the first things to begin growing when soil is turned over, whether in a graveyard or a battlefield. The vivid blood-red colour splashed across an otherwise shattered landscape is what provides this symbol with its power.
November 9, 2009 at 9:06 pm
[…] In the Dark A blog about the Universe, and all that surrounds it « Acts of Remembrance […]
November 15, 2009 at 1:00 am
About the pressure to wear poppies: These days I wear one, from choice. I also choose to follow the local parade of uniformed organisations to the local commemoration service.
But years ago I worked for a media organisation in a divided society where the poppy was an overtly political symbol. Yes, I’m talking about Northern Ireland. So the poppy of the Royal British Legion was naturally linked with one side. And that side was still engaged in conflict with the other side. So TV presenters/reporters/etc were given the option as to whether they wore poppies on screen. All was well.
Then a new regime was introduced that insisted that, in common with England, Scotland and Wales, all on screen staff had to wear a poppy. So, of course, that meant the exclusion of all staff who felt the news presenters/reporters should appear neutral. I felt the correct approach was to wear a poppy until that point when one appeared on screen – and then replace it afterwards. The new rule introduced division, embarrassment and worse for some people.
Despite that experience, I sometimes catch myself tutting when I see someone without one at the start of November. (It’s probably an age thing i.e. getting old and moany.) So I remind myself that, on peril of undermining the whole concept of poppy wearing, it should always be a matter of personal choice. Any element of compulsion diminishes it.
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November 10, 2014 at 6:14 am
Thank You. Lest We Forget.