Following the Menin Gate Memorial opening in 1927, the citizens of Ypres wanted to express their gratitude towards those who had given their lives for Belgium's freedom... Every night at 20:00 hours (8.00pm) a moving ceremony takes place under the Menin Gate in Ypres... The Last Post Ceremony has become part of the daily life in Ypres... It has been going for almost every year since the First World War, except for a brief period during the German Occupation.
"In Flanders Fields", a poem penned by Canadian doctor, Major John McCrae at an advanced aid post at Essex Farm, near Ypres, in 1915... It was published in Pruch Magazine in December 1915 and inspired the use of the poppy as an enduring symbol of remembrance day... Mc Crae died with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in January 1918 and is buried at Memeraux, France...
So many graves with no name, so many names with no grave....very moving, but peaceful and beautiful... nevertheless it shows that humanity has learned nothing...why some people still think war is the answer is unbelievable...
From backside postcard:
This is the largest Commonwealth war cemetery in the world. There are 11,976 war graves from WW1 here, including 8.961 from the United Kingdom. 1.368 from Australia, 1.025 from Canada, 520 from New Zealand, 90 from South Africa, 6 from Guernsey, 2 from British West Indies and 4 from Germany. Of these 8.366 or 70% , are "Known unto God". The long curved wall at the rear cemetery is " Tyne Cot Memorial" which commemorates 34.887 men with no known graves of Britain (33.707), New Zealand (1.179) and Newfoundland (1).
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