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Any Opinions On This?
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These children, their parents, and even grand parents have absolutely no conception of the horrors for both sides which happened at Verdun. I wasn't there either. However, to turn this anniversary of tremendous suffering and carnage into a touchy- feely, hands-on, interactive, run about field day is an abomination
23:48 Tue 31st May 2016
These children, their parents, and even grand parents have absolutely no conception of the horrors for both sides which happened at Verdun. I wasn't there either. However, to turn this anniversary of tremendous suffering and carnage into a touchy-feely, hands-on, interactive, run about field day is an abomination
@Svejk
You (and many others) don't post in R&S so I should poit out that I'm speaking as an atheist but *please*, I ask of participants, do not take my views as typical of atheists.
(i) The dead are dead and are entirely unaware of what occurs in the vicinity of their remains.
(ii) If they were aware, they might actually be pleased to see modern youth free to gambol and play in a peaceful world, Germans and French no longer at each other's throats over things as trivial as territory.
(iii) Graveyards are for the benefit of the living. I'll leave the concept of veneration of the dead as something for the denizens of R&S to mull over. Is it a belief system in its own right?
(iv) The proper place to venerate the dead (particularly the war dead) is in our minds. We can do this every day, if we so wish. Or every time we enjoy ourselves and our daily freedoms.
(v) An overgrown, neglected graveyard would, I must concede, put out the wrong message so, once built, it must be properly maintaned. If running a crowd across it does visible damage, then just don't repeat the exercise.
(vi) The political right are always authoritarian. Most of their utterances are in the form of "thou shalt not"s. If you're having more fun than they are, they will want an immediate stop put to that.
You (and many others) don't post in R&S so I should poit out that I'm speaking as an atheist but *please*, I ask of participants, do not take my views as typical of atheists.
(i) The dead are dead and are entirely unaware of what occurs in the vicinity of their remains.
(ii) If they were aware, they might actually be pleased to see modern youth free to gambol and play in a peaceful world, Germans and French no longer at each other's throats over things as trivial as territory.
(iii) Graveyards are for the benefit of the living. I'll leave the concept of veneration of the dead as something for the denizens of R&S to mull over. Is it a belief system in its own right?
(iv) The proper place to venerate the dead (particularly the war dead) is in our minds. We can do this every day, if we so wish. Or every time we enjoy ourselves and our daily freedoms.
(v) An overgrown, neglected graveyard would, I must concede, put out the wrong message so, once built, it must be properly maintaned. If running a crowd across it does visible damage, then just don't repeat the exercise.
(vi) The political right are always authoritarian. Most of their utterances are in the form of "thou shalt not"s. If you're having more fun than they are, they will want an immediate stop put to that.
HG I respect your right to have your own opinion. some of what you say is correct. The occupants may or may not worry about it, we don't know, but the living still, rightly, honour those occupants who gave their young lives defending the freedom we enjoy. As an ex-soldier and enjoying the freedom those young men died defending, I don't think allowing children to run through their resting place shows any kind of respect and reverence to those young men of all nations who gave their lives for us to enjoy that freedom.
Well I never thought I’d say this. When I read the question I agreed with most posters and thought it disrespectful but.....well when I watched the video, to me it didn’t seem disrespectful, in intent, at least. The faces were serious and yes, all that brightness running through the still crosses was, to me, quite moving. A reminder of all the bright young faces who went to war.