ChatterBank0 min ago
Remembering The Fallen
17 Answers
6 June 1944 D-Day .... so many died so we may live in freedom.. never forgotten...
Answers
To some extent it's worth remembering the ones who they left as well. Women who raised families without fathers, parents who lost sons for whom only the thought of their loved ones bravery would be comfort. Families who said goodbye, knowing that they might never see these young men again. Remember them all and learn from our memories. The learning is the...
08:50 Wed 06th Jun 2018
To some extent it's worth remembering the ones who they left as well. Women who raised families without fathers, parents who lost sons for whom only the thought of their loved ones bravery would be comfort. Families who said goodbye, knowing that they might never see these young men again. Remember them all and learn from our memories. The learning is the legacy
So true what Rowan said. At my mother's funeral the vicar talked about how my Dad had gone to India shortly after my brother was born and returned in 1946, but my brother died in early 1947 so he hardly knew him. I think that realisation upset me even more than my mother's death, my father had died years earlier, the loss of the family's life together.
I think we should also remember the people who survived WW11 but came home badly damaged.
There was a man who lived just around the corner from me had suffered bad burns to his face and hands from war wounds. Another man would march every day along the road where my school was. We thought it shell shock then.
some people suffered injuries in the war that weren't that obvious.
There was a man who lived just around the corner from me had suffered bad burns to his face and hands from war wounds. Another man would march every day along the road where my school was. We thought it shell shock then.
some people suffered injuries in the war that weren't that obvious.