Sunday 11 November 2012

Commémoration

Things are done slightly differently here to what we have been accustomed to previously. There is no 2 mins silence on the dot of 11 am. Rather, at 11 am people will begin to gather in front of the mairie and about 11:15 a wreath will be laid under the plaque commemorating the deportation of two Charnizeens during the Second World War. Then all those who have gathered walk down to the graveyard. Here at the war memorial the names of all those lost will be read out, wreaths will be laid and small candles lit. The children always play a part.
Despite its more relaxed, almost organic format it is just as moving as the more structured format we know from Remembrance Sundays in the UK.

People stop and spend a moment or two thinking of all those who lost their lives in these conflicts--each had a story, each had a life which touched others, each left a gaping hole in the family they left behind. Here in a village this is brought home rather forcefully as the majority of the names on the monument are the same as those who stand and remember them; descendants all.

We'll go down to the village for 11 am wearing our poppies and adding a little 'bleuet' [blue cornflower] sticker which is the French symbol. Poppies and cornflowers, both flowers of those fields in Flanders and symbols of so many lost in WWI and in all the wars that have followed.

13 comments:

the fly in the web said...

It was a bit more formal in the villages where I lived...flags and a bugle...but the names read out were, as in your village, the names of families still living there.

Niall & Antoinette said...

:Fly - we have 2 flag bearers [both Algerian war veterans I think] but everyone stands around by the commemorative plaque on the mairie wall. The mayor then shoos people around a bit and with no particular ceremony calls for a minute's silence. All then troop downhill informally led by flag bearers to the cemetery where the rest of the commémoration happens. Last year the pompiers took part this year they didn't.

Jean said...

If we had been chez nous this weekend we would certainly have joined in the parade and listened to the speeches in the square behind the church. It was an emotional and memorable event the one time we were able to do it.

Vera said...

Didn't realise it was Remembrance Day until I read your blog. Since we came here to France I have joined the memorial service at our local village cenotaph, and I feel quite upset that the demands of moving and shifting the house around pushed aside my awareness that it was November 11th today. Ah well, I promise myself that I shall remember this day next year!

Kathy said...

I love the thought of cornflowers as well as poppies. Just as in the UK, there can have been few, if any, communities untouched by the losses of the two world wars.

This morning I stood on a windy hillside in the far north of Scotland for the wreath laying at the local war memorial. So many names from such a small community and the same names are still everywhere in that community, especially the MacKays. Almost half the men commemorated there were named MacKay.

Tim said...

After the names of the fallen in two world wars and Algeria, Le Grand Pressigny has sadly another name to add to the memorial - killed in Afghanistan earlier this year. When will they ever learn.... Pauline

Tim said...

After the names of the fallen in two world wars and Algeria, Le Grand Pressigny has sadly another name to add to the memorial - killed in Afghanistan earlier this year. When will they ever learn.... Pauline

GaynorB said...

A beautifully written account.

Very sad to read from Tim's comment about the death in Afghanistan - the lives of another family forever changed.

Lest we forget...

Niall & Antoinette said...

@Jean - we find it moving as well and attended each year so far.

Niall & Antoinette said...

@Vera - it is one of those classic markers of the village year. This year being on a Sunday and on the 11th it was particularly well attended.

Niall & Antoinette said...

@Perpetua - As you say, in villages it is really all the familiar names which 'punch' the losses home. M. Villaret, our mayor leads the ceremony in front of a monument which lists 4 Villarets killed in WWI.

Niall & Antoinette said...

@Pauline/Tim - so very sad to hear that.
Doubt they ever will....

Niall & Antoinette said...

@Gaynor - thanks.
The children are encouraged to come along and bring posies for their [to them] distant relatives. It helps ensure we do not forget.