Body & Soul5 mins ago
2 Minutes Silence
25 Answers
Are you and your place of work going to have 2 minues silence on the 11th? Is this mark of respect dying out? Do you think we'll always have a moment of remeberance for those that gave their lives fighting for this country?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by IggyB. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't know if that's sad or not Georgit, my dad's uncle died last year and he was in the war but got caught and wound up in a POW camp. He always maintained that he would never celebrate rememberance day/ Sunday - he'd been tortured and his friends killed - why on earth would he want to remember that?
I hope so to be honest. I think we are - I'll complain if not! I do not think that it shall last for much, much longer as the younger the generation go the less and the less the times of the great wars can be fore told to such an extent. I hope for all those who died to keep Great Britain as it is, the 2 minute silence stays put for centuries.....
I work in an arts centre, we didn't do it last year and I know a bloke in another department complained to the management about that, but I dunno if anything came of it. It's a bit tricky because we can't stop in the middle of phone calls, and if we turn the phones off people will inevitably whinge about it. I think it is dying out but I don't really think that's a problem. Pity my poor bf - it's his birthday tomorrow and everyone is having protracted gloomy silences...
-- answer removed --
I don't know, I mean he wasn't saying that when they were handing out those reward payment things a few years ago when he went out and brought a brand new car. I guess it depends what experiences you had during the war. Another one I knew fully supported the cause, he was a lot older that my great uncle and was a Major during the war. I don't know enough to comment really though.
I always pull the truck over to the side of the road and have seen other drivers do it as well. My uncle was killed during WW2 and so I never knew him, but one of my most treasured possesions is his RAF Pilots log book. It is sad to say that after about a years training to fly Wellington bombers, he was shot down over Hamburg on only his 6th mission. He has no known grave, but I try to get to the RAF Memorial at Runnymede every couple of years where his name is on the wall with thousands of others.