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Filed under: Remembrance

I went up to Victoria Park the other day; here's one shot - raw and unedited. The Remembrance Day wreaths remain...

Filed under: remembrance

Micah says...

 

My Recollections, Samuel Kiffiak


Grandpa, you remember people and places and bombs bursting in air.
We can only imagine from photographics and re-tellings.
Thank you for serving, for the sacrifice it demands.

Love,
You children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren
and generations to come

Filed under: remembrance

rigzin says...

 I am impressed with how well done our national Remembrance Day celebrations are carried out. (Men, Women, young, old, Francophone, Anglophone, First Nations, Métis, multi-ethnic and multi-faith.) They represent a Canada that I recognize from my experience, and feel very fortunate to be a part of.

Filed under: remembrance

dawid says...

 

 

 

 

The average British soldier is 19 years old.....he is a short haired, well built lad who, under normal circumstances is considered by society as half man, half boy.  Not yet dry behind the ears and just old enough to buy a round of drinks but old enough to die for his country - and for you.  

He's not particularly keen on hard work but he'd rather be grafting in Afghanistan than unemployed in the UK.  He recently left comprehensive school where he was probably an average student, played some form of sport, drove a ten year old rust bucket, and knew a girl that either broke up with him when he left, or swore to be waiting when he returns home.  He moves easily to rock and roll or hip-hop or to the rattle of a 7.62mm machine gun.

 

 

He is about a stone lighter than when he left home because he is working or fighting from dawn to dusk and well beyond.  He has trouble spelling, so letter writing is a pain for him, but he can strip a rifle in 25 seconds and reassemble it in the dark.  He can recite every detail of a machine gun or grenade launcher and use either effectively if he has to.  He digs trenches and toilets without the aid of machines and can apply first aid like a professional paramedic.  He can march until he is told to stop, or stay dead still until he is told to move.

 

 

He obeys orders instantly and without hesitation but he is not without a rebellious spirit or a sense of personal dignity.  He is confidently self-sufficient.  He has two sets of uniform with him: he washes one and wears the other.  He keeps his water bottle full and his feet dry.  He sometimes forgets to brush his teeth, but never forgets to clean his rifle.  He can cook his own meals, mend his own clothes and fix his own hurts.  If you are thirsty, he'll share his water with you; if you are hungry, his food is your food.  He'll even share his life-saving ammunition with you in the heat of a firefight if you run low.

 He has learned to use his hands like weapons and regards his weapon as an extension of his own hands.  He can save your life or he can take it, because that is his job - it's what a soldier does.  He often works twice as long and hard as a civilian, draws half the pay and has nowhere to spend it, and can still find black ironic humour in it all.  There's an old saying in the British Army: 'If you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined!'

 

 

He has seen more suffering and death than he should have in his short lifetime.  He has wept in public and in private, for friends who have fallen in combat and he is unashamed to show it or admit it.  He feels every bugle note of the 'Last Post' or 'Sunset' vibrate through his body while standing rigidly to attention.  He's not afraid to 'Bollock' anyone who shows disrespect when the Regimental Colours are on display or the National Anthem is played; yet in an odd twist, he would defend anyone's right to be an individual.  Just as with generations of young people before him, he is paying the price for our freedom.  Clean shaven and baby faced he may be, but be prepared to defend yourself if you treat him like a kid.

 He is the latest in a long thin line of British Fighting Men that have kept this country free for hundreds of years.  He asks for nothing from us except our respect, friendship and understanding.  We may not like what he does, but sometimes he doesn't like it either - he just has it to do.  Remember him always, for he has earned our respect and admiration with his blood.

 And now we even have brave young women putting themselves in harm's way, doing their part in this tradition of going to war when our nation's politicians call on us to do so.

 

They are doing their bit.....please do yours by forwarding this to someone else.

 

Filed under: remembrance

turnerburns says...

If you don't create change...

If you don't create change...

change will create you

change will create you.

Life is change. Growth is optional. Choose wisely.

Thank You Fishtank,

@turnerburns

 

Filed under: remembrance

Paul says...

Round about the sites visitors visit vendors sell photographs of NYC. Some of them are panoramic photographs of the city that still show the WTC. All over the world they will be hung on the living room walls or elsewhere those who were excited by their trip to New York hang them, a sturdy background to the joy of the living. That's a good thing I think. Coupled with all those already bought those panoramas spread across the planet provide a quiet and meaningful world-wide memorial.

Filed under: remembrance

Paul says...

The Cause Endures.

http://tinyurl.com/lrsvhf

Filed under: remembrance


Although I was at work early in the morning and missed the dawn service, I was fortunate enough to catch the ANZAC Day march on along the main streets of Darwin.

See the rest of the photos in the full gallery.

Filed under: remembrance

Filed under: remembrance