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We Remember… Essay

Decent Essays

We Remember…

“Pleasure is a sort of oblivion, a forgetfulness. Pain is remembrance, you cannot forget pain.”
- Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh

On the eleventh month, the eleventh day and the eleventh hour – we remember. We remember the world wars, revolutions and major historic battles. Most of all, we should remember the soldiers who protected our country and contributed to our well being. During these well-known historic events, the soldiers fought to protect our right to be Canadian. They risked their lives to protect us all and bring peace to the world. To respect and honour them, we wear a poppy to remember our brave soldiers on Remembrance Day. We mostly remember them when they battled in World War I.
During the First World War, …show more content…

This is mentioned in the web document Remembrance Day, which describes, “The Canadians have fought, struggled, served, and died in both Wars out of free will.” (Remembrance Day, p.1) The brave men battled on the land, in the air and sea in many countries in the world. They sent letters to their wives, sweethearts, children and families reassuring them that they were well and in good health and explaining their importance of fighting in the war. Young courageous men even fought by faking their ages so they could join the army and defend their country. Throughout the war, many people’s lives in society were affected. The wounded soldiers returned home and many had to live with the physical, mental and emotional images they experienced in the war. Their lives were forever changed. All the memories from the war are disconnected and vague to our lives, because the majority of Canadians were born during peacetime and have difficulty relating to wartime experiences. We only feel the emotional and physical aspect of war through journal articles and television capsules.
We also may experience emotionally the war when we wear a poppy to remember our brave soldiers on Remembrance Day. This is seen in the article Manufacturing Remembrance, which portrays, “The poppy may help us remember, but we’ve forgotten a lot about the poppy.” (Nestruck, p.2) The poppy comes from the poem by John McCrae “In Flander’s Fields” where he mentions that we must recall those

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