View Full Version : Lest we forget
Pussy
25th April 2011, 05:21
We will remember them......
Nasty
25th April 2011, 06:37
For those who have gone before ...
We will remember.
Pussy
25th April 2011, 06:46
This picture was very kindly emailed to me by Jaxi from here.
munster
25th April 2011, 08:13
When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say,
For Their Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today
Kohima Memorial, (Battle of Kohima, India 1944)
Mom
25th April 2011, 17:50
Some of you will already know I have a long standing ANZAC committment to play Last Post for the Leigh Community Memorial Service. I made my way out there today - the weather was horrible so the service was moved to the community hall.
I stood there and waited for my old buddies to come in, and I waited, and I waited...
So many of them gone this year, the ones that were there very frail, and I doubt they will attend another ANZAC Service. The only plus of this was the enormous turn out, of young people, families and many, many new faces.
As the sun goes down, and in the morning - We will remember them.
Gone Burger
25th April 2011, 17:54
Lest we forget Pussy.
You already know how I feel on this day, and what happened with my day.
But it's a very emotional day. Thats for sure.
Good on you Anne. Thoughts are with your buddies that did not make it there today. We will remember them
blackdog
25th April 2011, 18:04
As the sun goes down, and in the morning - We will remember them.
We will remember them.
Mom
25th April 2011, 18:07
We will remember them.
Highlight of my day...
Listening to a few little girls (Guides and Brownies) singing Maori Batallion. So cute! They sometimes sing "Its a long way to Tipparary" and it used to turn into a great old sing along. Sadly our piano player is no longer with us.
davebullet
26th April 2011, 12:21
It's always good to go to a service and remember. Also good to see parents taking kids, passing on the respect and appreciation for what we now have.
SPman
26th April 2011, 13:06
It's always good to go to a service and remember. Also good to see parents taking kids, passing on the respect and appreciation for what we now have.
Just as long as they are there for the right reasons -
The best thing we can do is not create a national myth around our ‘fallen heroes’ but make sure we don’t send more to the same fate in the future. I see an increasing trend, as the old vets die off, to mythologise the events of the past and subvert it to a form of meaningless nationalism - media jingoism - tugs at the heart.....glorification of the dead "heroes".
That's not what those who served, wanted.
Dad didn't - he didn't march - if he wanted to think of his dead mates, he didn't need a day to do it. Nor did my grandfather, who suffered from war wounds all his life, nor did grandmothers, great aunts who lost brothers, fiances, friends......they attended, grieved, because they didn't want it to happen again.
The quiet country town parades are, perhaps, the most genuine in spirit - no maudlin politicians weeping crocodile tears, spewing pious sentiments while meaning none of it.........
Sorry for the rant, but it really is far more commercialised on this side of the Tasman......
BoristheBiter
26th April 2011, 14:14
Sorry for the rant, but it really is far more commercialised on this side of the Tasman......
Maybe we just care more.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.