History
wasn't my favourite subject at school. I
could never seem to remember dates, which seemed then to be what it was all
about.
I
don't think it helped that the only subjects we seemed to be taught - Tudors
and Stuarts and the Reformation - appeared so remote from our lives.
It
wasn't until I got much older, and watched Horrible Histories with my daughter
and various Dan Snow documentaries, that I discovered how interesting it could
be.
I
now read historical fiction for pleasure, particularly Robert Harris novels. I've just read this, by Cicero, quoted in
Dictator: "To be ignorant of what
occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. For what is the worth of human life, unless
it is woven into the life of our ancestors by the records of history?"
The
truth is, without learning about our history and passing this on to future
generations, we are destined to repeat the same mistakes.
That,
for me, is the message of Remembrance Sunday.
It is vital that we remember the lives that were lost in order for us to
have our freedom today. Equally, we must
ensure that we never again endure the loss of life on such a massive scale.
This
year's Remembrance Sunday was bright but bitingly cold, just as I remember them
being way back when I was a Brownie and then a Guide, my mother insistent on me
cramming as many layers under my uniform as I could as no coats were allowed on
parade.
I
thought of this as I saw the Beavers and Cubs in their uniforms, proudly parading
behind Gretton Silver Band, as they made their way from the Baptist Church down
to the Village Green and the War Memorial for the wreath laying ceremony.
Two
Audi cars had to stop and wait as a high-viz jacket-clad man halted the traffic
in order to let the column of about 100 people march solemnly to the sound of
the bass drum. Symbolic, perhaps, but
also an example of how far we've come.
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