The Patriot Files Forums  

Go Back   The Patriot Files Forums > General > General Posts

Post New Thread  Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 12-14-2003, 02:17 PM
MORTARDUDE's Avatar
MORTARDUDE MORTARDUDE is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 6,849
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Default The Christmas Truce 12/25/1914

THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE

On Christmas Day, 1914, in the first
year of World War I, German,
British, and French soldiers disobeyed
their superiors and fraternized
with "the enemy" along two-thirds of the
Western Front. German troops
held Christmas trees up out of the
trenches with signs, "Merry Christmas."
"You no shoot, we no shoot." Thousands of
troops streamed across a
no-man's land strewn with rotting corpses.
They sang Christmas carols,
exchanged photographs of loved ones back
home, shared rations, played football,
even roasted some pigs. Soldiers embraced
men they had been trying to
kill a few short hours before. They agreed
to warn each other if the top brass
forced them to fire their weapons, and to
aim high.
A shudder ran through the high command
on either side. Here was
disaster in the making: soldiers declaring
their brotherhood with each
other and refusing to fight. Generals on
both sides declared this
spontaneous peacemaking to be treasonous
and subject to court martial. By March,
1915 the fraternization movement had been
eradicated and the killing
machine put back in full operation. By the
time of the armistice in
1918, fifteen million would be
slaughtered.
Not many people have heard the story
of the Christmas Truce.
Military leaders have not gone out of
their way to publicize it. On
Christmas Day, 1988, a story in the Boston
Globe mentioned that a local FM radio
host played "Christmas in the Trenches," a
ballad about the Christmas Truce,
several times and was startled by the
effect. The song became the most
requested recording during the holidays in
Boston on several FM
stations. "Even more startling than the
number of requests I get is the
reaction to the ballad afterward by
callers who hadn't heard it before,"
said the
radiohost. "They telephone me deeply
moved, sometimes in tears, asking,
`What the hell did I just hear?'"
I think I know why the callers were in
tears. The Christmas Truce
story goes against most of what we have
been taught about people. It
gives us a glimpse of the world as we wish
it could be and says, "This really
happened once." It reminds us of those
thoughts we keep hidden away, out
of range of the TV and newspaper stories
that tell us how trivial and
mean human life is.
It is like hearing that our deepest wishes
really are true: the world
really could be different.

Excerpted from David G. Stratman, We CAN
Change the World: The Real
Meaning of Everyday Life (New Democracy
Books, 1991). Available for
$3.00 from
New Democracy Books, P.O. Box 427, Boston,
MA 02130.
__________________
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The Christmas Truce - December 24, 1914 82Rigger General Posts 5 12-26-2006 08:47 PM
Hamas leader says Israel truce is over David General Posts 3 11-09-2006 09:03 AM
Last survivor of 1914 'Christmas Truce' dies 82Rigger General Posts 0 11-21-2005 09:28 PM
WWI Christmas Truce Started By Thousands Of German Soldiers MORTARDUDE General Posts 3 12-27-2003 05:02 PM
The Christmas Truce thedrifter World War I 0 12-23-2002 05:51 AM

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 03:03 PM.


Powered by vBulletin, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.