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'Piddingworth...where St. George's Cross is not yet banned.'
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Mark Steyn
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FAITH
PIDDFLICKS
They shall not grow
old as we who are
left grow old; age
shall not weary them,
nor the years
condemn.
At the going down
of the sun and in
the morning,
we will
remember them.
In Flanders Fields
by Colonel John McCrae
           
(animated)
THE POPPY
The association of the red poppy — the Flanders Poppy — with battlefield deaths
as a natural symbol of resurrection and remembrance dates back to the Napoleonic
Wars when poppies were the first plant to grow in the churned up soil of soldiers'
graves in the area of Flanders.

This connection between the red poppy and war dead was renewed over a century
later on the Western Front during the First World War.

It was verses by Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae (1872-1918), a Canadian Medical Officer,
which began the intriguing process by which the Flanders Poppy became immortalised
worldwide as the symbol of remembrance: The inspiration for the verses had been the
death of a fellow officer, Lt Alexis Helmer, of the 1st Brigade Canadian Field Artillery
on 2 May 1915, during the Second Battle of Ypres (Ieper) in western Belgium, for whom
McCrae had performed the burial service. McCrae's verses, which he had scribbled in pencil
on a page torn from his despatch book, were sent anonymously by a fellow officer to the
English magazine, Punch, which published them under the title 'In Flanders Fields'
on 8 December 1915.

The Challenge


Three years later, after being appointed Surgeon-General to the First British Army,
Colonel McCrae himself died of pneumonia at Wimereux near Boulogne,
France, on 28 January 1918. On his deathbed, McCrae reportedly lay down the challenge:

    "Tell them this, if ye break faith with us who die,
    we shall not sleep."

The Response

Among the many people moved by McCrae's poem a YMCA canteen worker in New York,
Miss Moina Michael (1869-1944), who, two days before the Armistice was signed on
11 November 1918, wrote a reply entitled 'We Shall Keep the Faith':

        "We Shall Keep the Faith"

    Oh! You who sleep in Flanders Fields,
    Sleep sweet-to rise anew!
    We caught the torch you threw
    And holding high, we keep the Faith
    With all who died.

    We cherish, too, the poppy red
    That grows on fields where valour led;
    It seems to signal to the skies
    That blood of heroes never dies,
    But lends a lustre to the red
    Of the flower that blooms above the dead
    In Flanders Fields.

    And now the Torch and Poppy red
    We wear in honour of our dead.
    Fear not that ye have died for naught;
    We'll teach the lesson that ye wrought
    In Flanders Fields.

Michael also originated the idea of the red poppy as a symbol of remembrance.


Origins of the Memorial Poppy
     
The idea for the Flanders Fields Memorial Poppy, Moina Michael recalled in her
1941 book The Miracle Flower, came to her while working at the YMCA Overseas
War Secretaries' Headquarters on a Saturday morning, 9 November 1918.
The Twenty-Fifth Conference of the Overseas YMCA War Secretaries was in progress.
During a lull in proceedings Moina glanced through a copy of the November Ladies Home
Journal and came across McCrae's poem re-titled "We Shall Not Sleep".
The last few lines transfixed her:

    To you from failing hands we throw
    The torch; be yours to hold it high.
    If ye break faith with us who die
    We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
    In Flanders fields.

Moina Michael hereafter made a personal pledge to 'keep the faith' and vowed always
to wear a red poppy of Flanders Fields as a symbol of remembrance. Compelled to make
a note of this pledge she hastily scribbled her response, entitled "We Shall Keep the Faith",
on the back of a used envelope.

When the Conference delegates gave Moina a gift of ten dollars in appreciation of her
assistance, she went to a New York department store and purchased 25 artificial red poppies
and, pinning one on her own collar, distributed the remainder to the YMCA secretaries with
an explanation of her motivation. She viewed this act as the first group distribution of the
Flanders Fields Memorial Poppy.

Moina Michael hereafter tirelessly campaigned to get the poppy adopted as a national symbol
of remembrance. In September 1920 the American Legion adopted the Poppy as such at its
annual Convention. Attending that Convention was a French woman who was about to
promote the poppy — as a symbol of remembrance — throughout the world.


International Symbol of Remembrance


French widows, many with children on their laps, hand-making hundreds of thousands
of poppies in the early 1920s for distribution to veterans organisations around the world,
including the Legion & Returned Services Associations.  

Madame E. Guérin, conceived the idea of widows manufacturing artificial poppies
in the devastated areas of Northern France which then could be sold by veterans'
organisations worldwide for their own veterans and dependants as well as the benefit
of destitute French children. Throughout 1920-21, Guérin and her representatives
approached veteran organisations' in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and
New Zealand and urged them to adopt the poppy as a symbol of remembrance.

It was as a result of the efforts of Michael and Guérin — both of whom became known
endearingly as the "Poppy Lady" — that the poppy became an international symbol of
remembrance.

                                                Source: RNZRSA Historian Dr Stephen Clarke
THE DEFAMATION OF THE POPPY