From the BBC:
"WWI 'sacred soil' ceremony takes place in London"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25158245
"WWI 'sacred soil' ceremony takes place in London"
A ceremony has taken place in London
to mark the arrival of "sacred soil" from 70 World War 1 battlefields in
Belgium. The soil is going to be laid at a memorial garden marking the 100th
anniversary of WW1 in 2014. The soil, collected by British and Belgian schoolchildren and put into 70
sandbags, arrived on the Belgian Navy frigate Louisa Marie on Friday. It went on a ceremonial procession through London before reaching its last
resting place at Wellington Barracks. On arrival in London, the Louisa Marie moored alongside HMS Belfast and the
soil was transferred to the British light cruiser. The bags were loaded onto the gun carriage of the King's Troop Royal Horse
Artillery along with a crucible of soil from all the battlefields. It was escorted by mounted members of the Household Cavalry from the Life
Guards and the Blues and Royals, and mounted officers from the Metropolitan
Police. The route of the procession passed Tower Bridge, St Paul's Cathedral,
Trafalgar Square, Whitehall, Horse Guards Parade, The Mall and Buckingham
Palace. It was blessed in a ceremony at the Guards' Chapel at Wellington Barracks -
near Buckingham Palace - and will be placed into the ground at the Flanders
Fields Memorial Garden The soil will be placed "at the heart" of the garden where the words of John
McCrae's famous poem, In Flanders' Fields, will be inscribed.
With the sound of Jerusalem playing in the background, the youngest member of
the Friends of the Guards Museum emptied a ceremonial casket of soil into the
memorial garden - which will open to the public next year. The sandbags of soil were placed at the entrance of the Guards' Chapel and
will be added to the garden later on Saturday. More than 1,000 British and Belgian schoolchildren were involved in
collecting 70 bags of soil from the battlefields this summer. The Guards Museum - which funded the project with help from public donations
and corporate sponsors, including a contribution from the Government of Flanders
- described the £700,000 project as "unprecedented" and "historic".
Museum curator Andrew Wallis said the garden would stand as a "tangible
demonstration of the bond between Britain and Belgium". The process of bringing the soil to the UK began on Armistice Day with a
ceremony at the Menin Gate, attended by the Duke of Edinburgh.
^ All of these symbolic acts shows how the World War continues to affect the countries that fought them even 100 years later. If only Germany had learned from that war and not started another, bigger one we could continue to call it the "War to end all wars." ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25158245
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