Reading of iconic WWI poem on its 100th anniversary a tribute to Veterans Day
Stars and Stripes
By Carlos Bongioanni
November 11, 2015
CARLISLE, Pa. – One stanza in French, and two in English.
That’s how John Prato, the consul general of Canada, read “In Flanders Fields” during a Veterans Day commemoration that centered on the 100-year anniversary of the iconic World War I poem.
Several dozen attendees, including U.S. and Canadian dignitaries, listened to the reading Tuesday at the Army Heritage and Education Center, adjacent to Carlisle Barracks where the U.S. Army War College is located. The reading followed several brief historical sketches of the poem’s author and of the horrific events he witnessed during WWI.
Lt. Col. John McCrae, a Canadian Army surgeon, wrote the poem in 1915 after allied forces suffered devastating losses from chlorine-gas attacks and after a friend, Lt. Alexis Helmer, was killed on May 2 by an artillery shell.
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A poetic Veterans Day remembrance of the fallen 'In Flanders Fields'
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