Remembrance days are for remembering, full stop. It's incongruous and disturbing when other things intrude, like the vandalizing of a memorial at Malvern Collegiate this week. Remembrance Day itself arose after World War I, which was a controversial war. Antiwar poets wrote their poems from the trenches. But the Day is about the dead, not the war. They were innocent, even if those who sent them to die weren't. Nov. 11 is theirs.
Think Remembrance, then think rebranding
Remembrance Day this week looked a lot like an exercise in rebranding -- by the Canadian military, for its purposes and the Harper government for its own. The motives of each are different but they jibe.
In its origins, 11/11 was complex and contradictorily charged. The horrors of the First World War -- the gas, trenches, the futile, bottomless gore -- were a ghastly, vivid memory. It focused on the soldiers themselves and, especially, on the striking image of The Unknown Soldier, which transformed into The Forgotten Man of the Depression years. You hear it, too, in the first words of the UN charter after the Second World War, where global leaders seem shamed that, "twice in our lifetimes," they let the "scourge of war" occur.