From the BBC:
“VE Day: UK's streets not empty
as filled with love, says Queen”
"We are still a nation those
brave soldiers, sailors and airmen would recognise and admire" The Queen
has given a poignant address to mark the 75th anniversary of VE Day, praising
Britain's response to the coronavirus epidemic that has filled empty streets
with "love". In the broadcast, she said: "Today it may seem hard
that we cannot mark this special anniversary as we would wish. "Instead we
remember from our homes and from our doorsteps." It aired exactly 75 years
on from her father King George VI's address at the end of the Second World War
in Europe. Thanking the wartime generation, the Queen, 94, said: "They
risked all so our families and neighbourhoods could be safe." "We
should and will remember them." Victory in Europe (VE) Day marks the day
in 1945 when Britain and its allies accepted the unconditional surrender of
Nazi Germany, bringing the war in Europe to an end. This year's celebration has
been limited due to the lockdown conditions in place across Europe because of
the coronavirus pandemic. Despite this, the Queen said, "our streets are
not empty, they are filled with the love and the care that we have for each
other". "And when I look at our country today and see what we are
willing to do to protect and support one another, I say with pride that we are
still a nation those brave soldiers, sailors and airmen would recognise and
admire."
'Never give up': In the pre-recorded message from Windsor
Castle, her second televised address of the coronavirus pandemic, the Queen
described the Second World War as a "total war" where "no one
was immune from its impact". "At the start, the outlook seemed bleak,
the end distant, the outcome uncertain," she said. "But we kept faith that the cause was
right and this belief, as my father noted in his broadcast, carried us through.
"Never give up, never despair, that was the message of VE Day." Paying
tribute to those who were killed during the conflict, she said: "They died
so we could live as free people in a world of free nations. "They risked
all so our families and neighbourhoods could be safe." Reflecting on her
own memories of VE Day, the Queen said she "vividly" remembered the
"jubilant scenes my sister and I witnessed with our parents and Winston
Churchill from the balcony of Buckingham Palace". The Queen, then 19,
later slipped into the crowds outside Buckingham Palace, unnoticed, with her
14-year-old sister Princess Margaret, where the pair joined thousands of other
revellers. The khaki-coloured Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) cap she wore
to disguise herself from the public that day laid in front of her as she made
her address on Friday evening. It was in the ATS that Princess Elizabeth
qualified as a driver and the cap was part of her uniform when she undertook
national service in 1945. The Queen,
sitting behind a desk in Windsor's white drawing room, also surrounded herself
with other historic personal mementos from the war years, including wearing two
aquamarine and diamond clip brooches. The art deco-style pieces were an 18th
birthday present from her father in April 1944 - just over a year before VE
Day. Also visible were framed photographs of her father George VI and the Royal
Family standing on the Buckingham Palace balcony on VE Day with Prime Minister
Winston Churchill. The monarch's
broadcast marked the culmination of a raft of events throughout Friday
remembering the war and celebrating its end in Europe. Earlier, the UK held a
two-minute silence, led by the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, to
honour the war's servicemen and women. Prime Minister Boris Johnson thanked the
VE Day generation, saying "our gratitude will be eternal". He said:
"We can't hold the parades and street celebrations we enjoyed in the past,
but all of us who were born since 1945 are acutely conscious that we owe
everything we most value to the generation who won the Second World War." In
Westminster, Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle laid a wreath on behalf of the
House of Commons. The Royal Air Force display team the Red Arrows staged a
flypast over London, while RAF Typhoon jets flew over Cardiff, Edinburgh and
Belfast. In the afternoon, solo buglers, trumpeters and cornet players across
the country played the Last Post from their homes. Extracts from Sir Winston
Churchill's VE Day speech were broadcast, 75 years after it was first heard and
people were encouraged to join in a toast from their homes. Later in the
evening, Welsh soprano Katherine Jenkins, actor Adrian Lester and singer
Beverley Knight, performed well-known songs from the 1930s and 40s and the public
joined in a sing-along to Vera Lynn's wartime classic, We'll Meet Again.
^ The UK had a lot of official
and unofficial celebrations and ceremonies to mark the 75th
Anniversary of V-E Day. Much more than the US or Canada. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52590865
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