This is the basis of an address I gave at a public meeting, hosted by the Penzance branch of the
Society of Friends, at St John's Hall, Penzance, on 11th November. It was severely cut back to
fit into the five minutes allocated.
Before I start I must point out that I speak as a Humanist - not for Humanists.
And you will see I wear a red poppy out of respect for the past - a white poppy in of hope for the future.
In Australia, on the 25th April, they commemorate
ANZAC
day, The Australian and New Zealand
Army Corps., suffered a tremendous loss of life in Gallipoli during the 1st WW.
Eric Bogle
, a Scotsman,
who has spent most of his life in Australia, wrote a song called
"And the Band Played Waltzing
Matilda"
. I challenge you to find it, listen to it, shed a tear, and reflect on the tragedy of war.
Tomorrow there will be a parade to the cenotaph. Men marching in uniform with all the pomp and
ceremony they can muster. The atmosphere will be charged with 'proud patriotism'. I find that inappropriate.
Pride
and
Patriotism
are two words that I have difficulty with. According to Aesop,
I was brought up
on Aesop, 'Pride comes before a fall'.
Dominic Behan
, brother of Brendan, wrote a song called
'The Patriot Game'
.
It starts, "Come all you young fellows, and list while I sing, for the love of one's country
is a terrible thing."
Bertrand Russell
said "Patriotism is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons".
And
George Bernard Shaw
, "You'll never have a quiet world till you knock the
patriotism out of the human race."
Voltaire
wrote, "It is lamentable, that to be a good patriot one
must become the enemy of the rest of mankind."
But, of course, our chairman,
Andrew George MP
can tell you that pride and patriotism are tools politicians use to promote their wars.
I don't wish to take away any of the gravities of the occasion. I'm sure it means much to servicemen
who have lost comrades to war, and for their families who have to cope with the consequences, but
I see no place for pride, or patriotism. More like shame. We should be ashamed. We sent these
young men to foreign shores to kill, and to be killed. We are still sending them today, ironically, 40
years after abolishing the death penalty. But then, perhaps foreigners don't count. No, let us not be
proud of what we have done.
Another thing that I found most distasteful. Remember
Michael Foot
in his duffel coat at the cenotaph? A DUFLLE COAT?
How disgraceful! The media had a field day. They turned it into a fashion parade.
No, the right way to honour the dead is to listen to their families, listen to their widows with their fatherless
children, listen to their comrades who were fortunate enough to return, many of them
scarred mentally and physically for the rest of their lives. Let us start by treating all of them fairly.
Originally they had to resort to begging on the streets, until the
Royal British Legion
came along to
alleviate their indignity. They do a great job but why do they have to rely on charity, selling poppies?
And what did they call the first world war? The Great War?
"The war to end all wars"
. What was the
cry when it was all over?
"Never again"
. Did we listen? Did we #####. Throughout history wise men
have been saying the same thing but nobody's listening. From ancient China to
Napoleon Bonaparte
who said, "In the long run the sword is always beaten by the spirit".
General Douglas MacArthur
, spent his life in, and working for the military.
"I have known war as few men now living know it. It's very destructiveness on both friend and foe
has rendered it useless as a means of settling international disputes. War, the most malignant
scourge, and greatest sin of mankind, can no longer be controlled, only
ABOLISHED!
"
Bertrand Russell
"War does not determine who is right - only who is left."
John F. Kennedy
"War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the
same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today."
Simon Weston
OBE Welsh Guardsman, instantly recognized as the casualty of the Falklands war.
"I'm not interested in war anymore. I'm not interested in the reunions, getting together with old
mates, patting each other on the back, saying - damn it, didn't we do a good job?? "What?
Shoot, kill and bomb? "You'll find there's nothing victorious or glorious gained in conflict. "You've got
two sets of soldiers: the losers and the losers. It's just a matter of who loses the most. There are no
winners."
OK, have your parades if you must. Have your two minutes silence. But to honour the dead, and all who
have suffered in conflict around the world let us just
Put an End to War.
We
can
do it - and If I had
more time I could tell you how.