Remembrance Day and the Poppy Mafia : Sun Nov 11, 2012 1:49 pm
Yesterday I took my children into Leeds city centre to do a bit of Christmas shopping. When I got there I noticed an unusual amount of military personnel milling around - sea cadets, TA volunteers etc - selling poppies for Remembrance Day. As my eldest has been learning about WWII at school, I gave him 50p to go a buy one from a stand. As he was having his poppy pinned to the lapel of his coat, the two squaddies manning the stand asked me in an accusatory manner, "and where is your poppy, Sir?" I said that I didn’t have one. They responded by telling me about their colleagues in Afghanistan who were dying to save me. It got really quite intimidating and I ended up walking away before my son had managed to give his donation.
I was quite taken aback by this. I have actually donated to the British Legion this year through work, but I certainly don't think it is appropriate to judge or criticise people who choose not to wear a poppy. In my opinion it is the thought that counts, not the money or a piece of paper. I support our armed forces and observe my own quiet reflection each Remembrance Day. What happened yesterday was really quite wrong.
I've mentioned this to a few friends and they got all defensive and militant – “Why not just wear a poppy?”…… “Lest we forget about the fallen heroes”…….
When did Remembrance Day descend into a farce whereby everyone tries to 'out-respect' one another?