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11-11-11

Printed From: Enfield-Rifles.com
Category: Enfields
Forum Name: Enfield Rifles
Forum Description: Anything that has to do with the great Enfield rifles!
URL: http://www.enfield-rifles.com/forum_posts.asp?TID=9335
Printed Date: March 26 2026 at 2:51pm
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Topic: 11-11-11
Posted By: MJ11
Subject: 11-11-11
Date Posted: November 10 2018 at 11:15am
Well here we are again.

Take moment this Sunday to remember friends that never grew old.



Cheers
..MJ..


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The Spartans do not ask how many the enemies are but where they are



Replies:
Posted By: A square 10
Date Posted: November 10 2018 at 2:21pm
amen to that - i shall 


Posted By: Stanforth
Date Posted: November 11 2018 at 3:17am
I have done.

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Life.. a sexually transmitted condition that is invariably fatal.


Posted By: 42rocker
Date Posted: November 11 2018 at 8:29am
Said my Prayers a few minutes ago. 
 
Thanks Vets and their Familys 
 
Later 42rocker


Posted By: Shamu
Date Posted: November 11 2018 at 8:56am
Flag is at 1/2 staff.
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2266390/images/o-ARMISTICE3-facebook.jpg



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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)


Posted By: Zed
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 3:48am
A very wet and windy ceremony yesterday at our village memorial. At 11 o'clock the church bell was rung for 11 minutes. Followed by a short service and then walk to the memorial. The names of the fallen are read one by one (it's a small village so 14 names). Then walk back to the "Mairie" (village hall" for a "Vin d'honneur". There we exhibited a few items from WWI, she!! casings, bayonnet and equipment from some of the families.



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It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice!


Posted By: Pukka Bundook
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 6:27am
A mate posted this on another forum, and wanted to share it with you blokes;
 
 
Back in 1974, I was lucky enough to be selected as one of 20 serving soldiers to go to France with some WW II veterans from my regiment. When you consider the CO, Adjutant, RSM, and many other senior ranks were included in that 20, a 19, almost 20 year old private was very lucky. Only 2 privates went.

One week was official duties, one week free time. The main reason was the 30th anniversary of Louvigny by my unit. While there with a veteran whom I thought was old but probably was about my current age, I got a living history lesson not found in any of the history books! More later if anyone is interested.

We did visit the big Canadian war cemetery in Normandy. To see so many graves and read the names and the ages. Many were only my age!! It was such a sad but yet a tranquil feeling I had and later I went back on my own to walk among the rows.

I encountered a French family and it looked like they were having a picnic. Being in uniform, they called me over and after introductions I learned that the French adopt a war grave. Thank goodness there are more people than graves. In my school boy French and his limited English and a French/English dictionary we communicated quite well.

I learned they were celebrating “their” soldier’s birthday. I asked as he was an unknown Canadian soldier how they knew? He said they did not. This was the day the man’s father had adopted the grave so it would be his birthday. He told me, and I remember like it was yesterday, that his father had specifically chosen an unknown soldier.

He said to me that his father was dead and now he looks after the grave and in turn his son will and down the line. Their soldier had given everything so they could be free. Not only his life, but his very identity. His family would never know what happened to him or where he was buried. He said the soldier’s family had loved him in life, in death my family will now love him forever. Should he be loved less than those here who have a name?

That visit to France really changed me. Like so many of us, I took freedom for granted. I met people who had lost theirs and lived under enemy occupation. Met soldiers who fought on the battlefields I walked on and I saw the graves of those who did not get to ever come home.

On this Remembrance Day, I want to say I remember all those living and dead who went before me and I do remember every day.

Thank you all for the world and for the freedoms that I have today.

CQMS.
 


Posted By: Shamu
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 7:02am
See if you can find an on-line copy of a Made for TV movie called "A Foreign Field", Its a different take on veterans & their differing later lives.
Part drama, but with some lightening comedy touches.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Foreign_Field" rel="nofollow - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Foreign_Field



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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)


Posted By: MJ11
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 8:45am
Yesterday i traded text messages with five of my surviving school mates who served during my tour. I was surprised to learn just how many served from our class. Just under fifty from our small school and twenty from my class of 1965. Of my class eight didn't come back and of the remaining twelve six of us were WIA and two later died from their injuries or related service connected issues. We made a promise to connect next year for another roll call. None of us are in good shape two have COPD and are also on dialysis and one is about to start another has heart and liver trouble.  It seems that  soldiers never really stop giving. I can only imaging the unreported suffering from WW1 and WW2. Booth my parents served in WW2 and died young from service related problems.

Bless them all.


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The Spartans do not ask how many the enemies are but where they are


Posted By: Zed
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 11:44am

Tyne Cot Cemetry; near Ypres in Belgium. A quiet place! in Flander's fields


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It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice!


Posted By: A square 10
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 7:32pm
we had a record turnout at our towns event , the weather was cold , cloudy , windy and damp , 


Posted By: SteelFlint
Date Posted: November 12 2018 at 8:19pm
Je me souviens.  Thank you all veterans and families who gave us today.




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