In an article captioned Remembrance Day, “Gone but not
forgotten” Niamh stated:
“They are gone but not forgotten. How can they be when every
year so many countries Remembrance Day or Veterans Day is
celebrated? When we hear a eulogy for a mother or a eulogy for
a father, they are usually very personal, speaking of than
person’s attributes and personalities. Remembrance Day is
different because on that day we speak about the sacrifices of
the collective armed forces. Words like courage, bravery and
patriotism are an integral part of a remembrance oration or
speech. Sometimes Veterans Day is called Armistice Day in
commemoration of the ending of the First World War in November
1918. On that day we remember the poppies Flanders, a symbol of
the blood shed in the trenches. Monarchs and Heads of State lay
wreaths at the tombs of unknown soldiers. They are often
flanked by today’s serving soldiers or by elderly veterans
proudly wearing their medals. It is however, their families and
friends who remember such patriots in their hearts.”
What lesson war has for us?
With no exceptions, every leader knows the sad consequences of
War. They know how innocent lives are lost by young people who,
propelled by patriotism and in some cases by conscription, go to
war zones. The sad farewell when they leave behind their
families; with the tears of their children and spouses; being
away from home and yearning to get back as soon as possible; the
awareness of the risks involved and that there is the
possibility that they may be killed or incapacitated.
Yet, wars continue and those who authorize it will always find
rational explanations and justifications for resorting to
fighting and killing fellow human beings.
How illogical! How sad? These are times when international
agencies work towards the promotion of peace and diplomatic
persuasions remain an underutilized procedure to settle
disputes.
The most experienced war Veterans have in the latter years of
their lives denounced war.
Here are samples of observations:
Sir Winston Churchill:
“The human tragedy reaches its climax in the fact that after all
the exertions and sacrifices of hundreds of millions of people
and of the victories of the righteous cause, we have still not
found peace or security, and that we lie in the grip of even
worse perils than those we have surmounted….”
Dwight D. Eisenhower:
“When people speak to you about preventive war, you tell them to
go and fight it. After my experience, I have come to hate war.
War settles nothing.”
Douglas McArthur (US Army General who commanded troops in
both World War 11 and Korea): “By profession, I am a soldier
and take pride in that fact. But I am prouder – definitely
prouder – to be a father. A soldier destroys in order to build;
the father only builds, never destroys. The one has the
potentiality of death; the other embodies creation and life.
And while the hordes of death are mighty, the battalions of life
are mightier still. It is my hope that my son, when I am gone,
will remember me not from the battle but in the home repeating
with him our simple daily prayer, “Our Father Who Art in
Heaven.”
THE OPPOSITE OF WAR IS PEACE AND WHAT IS NEEDED IS THE PROMOTION
OF PEACE IN HOMES, SCHOOLS, NEIGHBOURHOODS, COMMUNITIES AND AT
NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL LEVELS.
Too often, the desire to exhibit power and display superiority
lead many persons to run away from the pathway of conciliation
and finding practical solutions in a spirit of give and take.
Such are the situations which destroy peace and replace it with
aggression and hostility.
As we reflect on the contributions of the many that lost their
lives in wars, we pay tribute to their bravery, patriotism,
commitment and sacrifice.
It is my view that the sad lessons of war should be a powerful
and effective reason for avoiding war and promoting peace and
understanding.