• Leave a message for the TPYF Reporters!

    The roving reporters in France and Belgium will be posting daily videos and blogs about the places and stories they are investigating online.
    23rd September 2008
  • Get Involved!
  • We are looking for UK reporters to follow their journey online, watch the videos and leave them comments and questions about the places they are visiting. Perhaps you have been to the battlefields before and have some advice? Or maybe there is something you want them to find out on your behalf? Get involved by posting your message here …

    Join our Remembrance campaign
    As you know this trip is for Remembrance 08. We want to find out what Remembrance means to young people today and in the future. Post your thoughts or send photos and text via your mobile remembrance@rwaves.co.uk
  • Comments

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    14 Comment(s)
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    Did you cry when you went to see the places where people had died and fought?
    Anz
    05/11/2008 10:18:23
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    How do France celebrate remberance day ?
    deanna s
    05/11/2008 10:21:49
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    I think Remembrance Day is a great way to remember the people who sacrificed their lives for their country in the World Wars.
    Florence
    05/11/2008 10:27:21
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    I think Remembrance day is important because people who died sacrified their lives for others and I think its important to remember those people.
    Ellie
    05/11/2008 10:31:07
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    What natoinality are there?
    We think we should have a special lesson about Remembrance day. What did you learn about Remembrace day before you went on the trip?
    LauraW
    05/11/2008 10:37:11
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    I will be at the Cenotaph in London on Remembrance Sunday, and plan to put markers in the Field of Remembrance for two men whose story we followed when we went on the TPYF visit to Thailand and Australia - Mr Peter Ramm and Mr Ronnie Graham. Both men were prisoners of war in the Far East in the Second World War, but died of illness in Thailand in the POW camps there.
    Deanna - you asked about how France remembers their war dead. They too have a ceremony, but usually on 11 November, whatever day of the week that is (in Britain, we always commemorate our war dead on the nearest Sunday to 11th), and usually with a very formal ceremony in the middle of Paris. This year I believe the ceremony will take place at Verdun. Verdun is the most important battle of the First World War for the French - it's like the battle of the Somme is for the British, or Vimy for the Canadians. Look out for news of this on the 11th - I'm pretty sure that the BBC is going to televise it on that day, in the evening as well as during the day.
    Sam TPYF
    06/11/2008 12:14:15
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    Best wishes for your assignment.

    I'd like to know if the poppy an internationally adopted symbol of rememberance or is it only that of the Royal British Legion? If the latter then what symbols do other countries use?
    Andrew
    07/11/2008 12:32:49
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    In response to Andrew's question about the poppy as a symbol of Remembrance - I think that it is an internationally recognised and adopted symbol. The Canadians and Australians certainly use it in the same way that we do here in Britain. The actual design of it is different, but it's still a red poppy that people will buy to wear. It is such a powerful symbol as it represents the abundant number of poppies that grew in the battlefields of northern France and Belgium. I think that they grew in such numbers because the heavy shelling by the artillery during the battles dispersed poppy seeds further and wider than before.
    Sam TPYF
    08/11/2008 13:39:08
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    To answer Deanna's question the French have a public holiday on Tuesday the 11th during which every area has a ceremony at their many memorials, these ceremonies are attended by veterans and people of all ages. This tour you are doing is a fantastic idea , having completed the tour earlier this year I can think of no better way of showing young people the real horrors of war.
    Bill Donnelly
    09/11/2008 10:08:30
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    Further to Sam's comment about the poppy as a symbol for remembrance I think this relates to Britain and the commonwealth as it is not used in USA, for an example, either by individuals or on wreaths. Moina Mitchell, an American poet, was one of the first to suggest wearing a bright red flower on a jacket collar or blouse. The YMCA overseas secretaries group donated some money on 9th November 1918 and she brought 25 poppies. There is agood account of John McCrae's life and how the pooppy came to be chosen in a book called "In Flander's Fields" by Herwig Verleyen
    Karin
    11/11/2008 11:22:33
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    We had a school assembly on remembrance and we stood in silence for 2 minutes. What nationalities came to the service that ou went to?
    clemmie
    11/11/2008 15:24:01