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Notes On Remembrance Day

on November 11th, 2022 by Helena Kaufman 1 comment

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Notes on Remembrance Day

Notes on Remembrance Day Graphics by TAN

World wars have come and gone, yet we still have wars around us today. It is conflict regardless of its size or intensity. It is the thief of quality lives whether it is called terror, rebellion, liberation, a civil conflict, a war on drugs or an insurgency.

Humans struggle with the decisions to go to war and then endure the daily nightmare to not only survive. The Afro News, at this special time of remembrance, wishes for people to have the courage to summon forgiveness and then the strength to face the personal and community challenge to move through the difficulty towards lasting peace and constructive growth.

On November 11 we remember the time and the reasons humanity chose to go to war. It is in all our benefit to remember the aftermath and to give attention to how we will take these lessons and feed future generations and to rebuild.

Canadian Observance

What we remember when we are awake in the light of day on November 11 is Veteran’s Day, Poppy Day, Armistice Day and Remembrance Day. These are the various names, depending on where in the Commonwealth or larger world you live, by which we recognize the day an armistice was declared.

Traditionally, on Remembrance Day we stop activity and observe two minutes of silence at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month (11:00 am, 11 November), as that marks the time (in the United Kingdom) when armistice became effective and the guns fell silent.

In Canada, we see single red poppy flowers worn on lapels, or wreaths of artificial poppies begin to appear two weeks in advance of the one official day. The flower as emblem resulted from the famous poem ‘In Flanders’s Fields’, written by Canadian military physician John McCrae. The poppy, he noted, bloomed blood red on the worst battlefields of World War I, near Flanders.

Since then we have seen peace movements and marches. Bridges have been built for education and support the world over. Memorials have been erected. Yet, for many Canadians, both new and settled, war is not just a phenomenon seen through the lens of a television camera or a journalist’s recounting from afar.

The Afro News with its mission as The Voice of Unity – and new Canadian, Honore M. Gbedze at the helm respectfully covers current local and global situations. The publication reports on strife and challenge and also presents news of hope of a positive and healthy future. It reconciles this in the same way that the world honours the dead who served with valour and courage – on opposite sides of the battle lines.

Universally, we must surely remember the sacrifices as their belief in freedom, of choice, in peace and that their actions would make a significant difference for a safer and better future.

We are wise to acknowledge the hard truths of history and to work for the very values our predecessors, our family members, our fellow citizens fought hard to achieve wherever they came from. The responsibility is now on us to remember and to not take for granted the Canadian values and institutions that support us all.

Who, what and how will you remember on this day ?

In our hearts today and every day, till resolution of their situations, are all the souls caught up in the conflicts in the Sudan, the Congo and other areas of Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Europe. Let’s stand for peace together and make our world a better place for all.

TAN

@TheAfroNews

Filed under: Canadian News, Features, Opinion/Comment, Point of View, The Bridge Tagged With: civil conflict, Humans struggle, Remembrance Day, World wars

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About the author: Helena works with new Canadians and established professionals, entrepreneurs and service providers to define their message so that it makes them money and helps them get the results they want. http://helenakaufman.com Twitter, Face Book or invite her on LinkedIn @HelenaKaufman

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • The Afro News
    November 20th, 2022, 11:49

    Cher Honore – please accept my thanks for the dignified and touching article about Remembrance – relating past and present conflicts across the world..As the granddaughter of a WW1 veteran who did not survive that war and the widow of an WW 2 fighter pilot who did, I value TAN’s words.
    If we are to do better for the next generations, we must remember – and learn from out past.
    Regards,
    Shelagh Armour-Godbolt

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