Re : Re: Re : Remembrance Day
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LittleGrizzly
Cool picture Louis, when was it taken ?
On September 25, 1984, 70 years after the start of the First World War, French president François Mitterrand and federal chancellor Helmut Kohl participated in a memorial service for fallen soldiers at Verdun. The Battle of Verdun (February-December 1916) had claimed the lives of more than 700,000 soldiers and came to symbolize the horror of war for both the Germans and the French. A catafalque with French and German flags was laid out in front of Douaumont Ossuary, which contains the remains of 130,000 fallen soldiers. As the national anthems of both countries played, Mitterand and Kohl joined hands – a gesture of friendship symbolizing the lessons learned from a frightful past.
It is a very iconic image.
A lot can be said of Franco-Germanic relations, or of Mitterand and Kohl* - none of which I'll go into here - but for all of that, the gesture remains a potent symbol of Europe's twentieth century.
Of all the continents, Europe is the most dramatic, the most hauntingly beautiful.
Verdun is the central place of remembrance for France. The place of myth, honour, sacrifice. Of madness and of reconcilliation. Unlike the Somme or Ypres, Verdun was never really cleared after WWI. The devastated villages were not restored, the fields were not recovered for farmland. Rather, trees were planted. It is a big forest nowadays. The soil, which received about a thousand shells per meter over the course of the war, remians very instable. Being in the north, it is also very wet. The forest is always cold and misty. To this day, lots of remains are uncovered each year, or come simply floating to the surface. The forest is haunted, souls dwell there that know no peace.
It is impossible to tell most of the time whether uncovered remains belong to a German or Frenchman. They are put in the ossuary of Douaumont. 130.000 men lie there alone. This ossuary is what both men are looking at.
*For example, as a fun fact: before Russia bought German chancellors, France used to do so. Mitterand secretly paid Kohl 15 million euros for his election campaigns.