Tags for Forum Posts: poppy appeal, remembrance poppies
thanks for that Drew. I think most people want to wear a poppy for all the right reasons. But one thing you musn't mention is 'why do we keep sending our troops to kill and be killed?'
I recently began a fascinating and free online course with Future Learn about trauma and memory in ww1 and the first week was about the physical and mental wounds brought home by the soldiers and the difficulties they had. Last week, I went to a beautiful and very moving exhibition at the Manchester Art Gallery which featured pictures of servicemen and women who have to live with terrible injuries. Studying and looking at the materials reminds me that it is easy to forget in all of this that millions of men and women in conflict don't die but have to live with disability.
So I have changed my view on the poppy. I do buy one and I do contribute to BL funds. I do so as much for those that lived and who may not have made it onto war memorials but whose time at the fronts shortened their lives. I also don't think that the commemorations have been hijacked, simply because too many good historians, both professional and local like Jennifer Bell have done their best to make sure the narratives are corrected and the myths (largely forged by the grandchildren of veterans in the 60s) have been explored and discussed and corrected. I haven't seen that many people wearing poppies and some high profile figures on the TV have made it plain that they won't be bullied into it. As for politicians, well they're a different ballgame altogether but Caroline Lucas (Green) recently appeared in QT with a white poppy...and a red one.
As an amateur historian myself studying this period in depth, I was challenged greatly on my beliefs and knowledge of this war and have been forced to examine just why I think they way I do. I was surprised to find that for some the Great War isn't viewed as a disaster, for example in Poland where it is believed by many that their country wouldn't have been "born" as a modern state without it.
This was not a simple war but a deeply complex one with repercussions that continue today. We can't understand the situation in Europe or the middle East without knowing how this war and the behaviour of countries after the war created some of the problems that are still creating wars today. We do need to talk about it, read about it and reflect on what we read even if it is to disagree.
BTW the theme of this week's free reads is The Great War
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