On Friday evening, I called the desk sergeant at Number One District and asked what it would take to withdraw the charge for stealing a poppy box.
A store can withdraw shoplifting charges if they choose. It occurred to me if an offer was made to restore whatever was in the box considerable expense and misery might be avoided.
Charges could not be withdrawn. The process had to be followed. Canadian Tire was referenced.
I wrote a post about it.
A furious anonymous demanded to know; " Who the Hell do you think you are?"
I did not publish it. I don't have to respond to it. But I want to.
Blog Readers know who I am. I have few secrets.
I am the daughter and grand-daughter of two mothers who lost sons in the carnage of two world wars.
I was fifteen when my brother was killed. He was twenty-two. My mother was sixteen when her brother's life blood soaked into the sand at the Dardanelles in Turkey .He also was twenty-two.
They disembarked in their thousands armed with rifles. Young bodies were ripped to shreds by the machine gun fire that awaited them.
My brother was in the Air Force in the Second World War.
On a bombing raid over the Ruhr, the plane took a direct hit. The pilot and co-pilot were dead in the burning inferno. My brother was wounded and his parachute in the burning part of the plane . He and a surviving crew member ,with one parachute between them, wrapped arms around each other and jumped.
He knew they would black out on the way down. He told me when he was on leave the week before.
He had to jump or be blown to pieces when the plane exploded in the sky.
My brother was buried in Dusseldorf . His identification tag, rosary missing the crucifix and a small pen knife were kept safe while my mother continued to hope he would come home. She grew a little stash of his favorites like apricot jam for his return.
When the war ended, a few months later, Patrick was still officially "Missing In Action"
We learned the details from the father of the surviving crew member who was taken as a prisoner of war
I notified the War Office.
By return telegram the War Office notified us ; Flight/Sergeant Patrick Finnigan is confirmed killed in action.
After Remembrance Day, I watched a T.V. feature on Winston Churchill. In the First War he tried to alert politicians and Generals to the reality of machine warfare. It was hardly a secret.
No matter. They sent millions of men to their deaths carrying rifles and wearing tin hats against
tanks, howitzers and machine guns.
They sent artists to record the history of war , then banned the exhibition because they depicted the awful fear,despair and certain knowledge of impending doom on the faces of men who were little more than boys.
Charlie Rose had an American General on his program last week. He has written a book pointing out the obvious.
Lessons we do not learn from history ,we are doomed to repeat.
Today's armies are volunteer. They do not number hundreds of thousands of conscripted men. They
can't be court-martialled by an officer and shot to death on the spot for desertion.
War is not like anything previous. Friends are not who they appear to be.Enemies appear to be friends.
Wars need to be fought differently.,
The General is frustrated. Just like Churchill was a hundred years ago.
I don't believe the awful nature of my brother's or my mother's brother's deaths are respected or acknowledged by sending idealistic young Canadians to be blown to pieces by roadside bombs in Afghanistan. Or to return home traumatized by the horror they have witnessed and the senselessness of it all.
I believe wars are lost by the side whose army is decimated first.
At the ends of the second war, allied troops discovered they were killing fifteen year old children in uniforms.
I don't believe wars are won.
Quite the contrary.
No amount of money raised by the sale of poppies and wreaths, nor theatrical performances at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Day convince me otherwise.
I am the daughter and grand-daughter of women who lost sons in circumstances no mother should have to bear.
At the hands of their own leaders.
I do not forget.
It 's who the hell I am.
Wednesday, 19 November 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
15 comments:
Wow!
This is a very powerful and beautiful piece.
In the olden days kings, queens and generals led their armies into battle. And many lost their lives.
But they were true leaders, compared to the scummy cowards we have today, and send our young men and women to die while they make speeches.
You always write your best when faced with monumental stupidity.
Well….Hell! I bet you shut the traps of one or two people. Nicely written Evelyn.
I think the saying " Don't Tread On Me " traces back to Ben Franklin but it sure fits you. Maybe a new title for the Blog one day ?
That must have been a one-of. The comments on your post did not reflect that sort of nonsense.
Why would someone be hassling you about expressing understanding and knowledge far greater than his/her own ? I love it when you bring your experience into play.
Ouch ! I do hope that hit your target but I do have to wonder what this character was even doing commenting on your Blog. Free speech, I guess.
"Free speech, I guess."
Yeah, what a concept!
19:04
There's nothing free. It always comes with a price. Evelyn knows one or two things about that as well.
There is clearly nothing wrong with your vision. That might be the best of your posts that I have read.
I think it is great that you let that comment stew for a while before putting up your post. People mess with history at their own peril and someone [ maybe even the resident troll ] was messing with yours. Well done.
You are secure in yourself - others are still fighting the election............
A good read about life after service.
http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/books/thank-you-for-your-service/9780385680967-item.html?s_campaign=goo-BooksByTitle&gclid=CJ6g_K2AisICFak-MgoddisAsw
There are $11 BILLION unspent dollars at Veterans Affairs. That is not out country takes care of our service-people.
NOT
Post a Comment