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The Christmas Truce of 1914-with pictures, video, music

Posted on 12/25/15 at 11:41 pm
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133654 posts
Posted on 12/25/15 at 11:41 pm
Christmas Truce of 1914 wiki



Short Video on the Christmas Truce

"Christmas in the Trenches"-song by John McCutcheon

In the midst of one of the bloodiest wars in modern history, a moment of curious humanity was witnessed on the battlefields of the Western Front. A Christmas Truce was declared by both sides, and for a brief amount of time, the fighting stopped. The artillery ceased its awful bombardment. The sound of machine gun and rifle fire did not ring out. Instead, in the midst of the mud and blood and snow, the soldiers prepared to celebrate Christmas in peace.

Christmas Trees were raised in places where shells had razed the forests. Garlad was hung instead of barbed wire. And instead of poison death drifting across No Man's Land, Christmas Carols, in different tongues, filled the air.

Men on either side, who had scant hours before been engaged in ending life, were now celebrating it. Christmas came the same to Germans as it did to Frenchmen, Brits and Scots. Though the tongues may have been foreign, the tunes were not. And in that brief respite from hell, they exchanged volleys of song instead of bullets.

In an extraordinary show of courage, a soldier unarmed but for a truce flag walked into the killing field, not knowing if his foolhardiness would be rewarded with the crack of rifles. Instead he found a similarly brave handshake marching to greet him, and wishing a Merry Christmas.

And then, the trenches erupted. The fear and hate was banished as men from both sides flooded no man's land and celebrated Christmas in their own way. They traded cards and shared small gifts. Tobacco, alcohol, candy, cards and pictures from home. In some places a friendly game of football was played, illuminated by flarelight usually used to aid artillery fire.


Soldiers saw standing next to them, not monsters, not beasts as the propaganda would have them believe, but men and boys the same as them. Serving their country. Doing their "duty". Missing wives and sweethearts and children back home. Cold, cramped and tired. But they shared their humanity that Christmas, bound by cultural ties that knew no borders or nationalities, but "Peace and Good will towards men."


And as suddenly as that peace and good will had stolen upon No Man's Land, Christmas ended, and with it the truce. They rushed back to their respective trenches once more as the cannons belched their screaming death into that starry sky, and The War returned.

But it was said that those who experienced that wonderous event were changed somehow. That no longer was the enemy down their barrel some faceless butcher, but Friedrich from Munich, who liked French chocolate and whose little Ingrid was turning 5 in the spring. Or Thomas from Birmingham, who liked Irish whisky and blonde girls with pretty voices. They were men thrust into the same horrid situation, sitting in the trench they were only by the providence of their place of birth.

It was said that the soldiers there hesitated to shoot thereafter, or missed on purpose. Correspondences were sent across the lines to check on the condition of "the lad who played the fife so well", "that German fiddler", or "the one who sang so well". Regiments were shifted because soldiers were reluctant to engage those they had met in shared brotherhood that Christmas.

There was no widespread truce the following Christmas, or any thereafter. The commanding officers would not risk something which might show the humanity of the enemy or inhibit the slaughter when the time came. But for that one brief time, in late December of 1914, peace reigned, and those men found that on either end of the rifle, they were not so different.

Merry Christmas.

This post was edited on 12/26/15 at 9:53 am
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
73057 posts
Posted on 12/25/15 at 11:45 pm to
WWI Veterans are all quitters.

They wanted their bonuses early, they ruined this country, worse than any Boomer EVER thought to rape and plunder.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
154569 posts
Posted on 12/25/15 at 11:49 pm to
The Royal Guardsmen - "Snoopy's Christmas" (1967)

quote:

A followup to their earlier "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron", the song is about how Snoopy had to go out and fight the Red Baron on Christmas Eve. The Baron has Snoopy at his mercy after a long dogfight but, instead of shooting him down he forces Snoopy to land and offers Snoopy a holiday toast. Afterward, Snoopy and the Red Baron fly their separate ways, "each knowing they'd meet on some other day".

Although fictitious, the song is set against the backdrop of a legitimate historical event. During World War I, in 1914, "The Christmas Truce" was initiated not by German and British commanders, but by the soldiers themselves...

The song even has the initiator correct as it was generally the German soldiers who called over to the British and initiated the truce and, in the song, it is the Red Baron—a German WWI hero—who extends the hand of Christmas friendship to Snoopy.
Posted by Passing Wind
Dutchtown
Member since Apr 2015
4795 posts
Posted on 12/25/15 at 11:58 pm to
quote:

Soccerfut

I swear you offer nothing to any board I've seen you post on. There should be a button to hit where when one gets enough votes they get a ban for life from posting. You'd win that award in a heartbeat.
This post was edited on 12/25/15 at 11:59 pm
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133654 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:02 am to
They were a damn sight braver than you'll ever hope to be.

Boys facing death at every turn in the advent of modern mechanized murder the likes of which the world had never seen. You aren't worthy to drink the piss from their boots.

This post was edited on 12/26/15 at 12:03 am
Posted by Passing Wind
Dutchtown
Member since Apr 2015
4795 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:03 am to
quote:

were a damn sight braver than you'll ever hope to be

Amen
This post was edited on 12/26/15 at 12:05 am
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
73057 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:05 am to
Shattup y'all. They're all dead now, that's what I meant by quitters. Including my paternal grandpa. It was a shittier war than even WWII which means they were tougher dudes than really tough guys.

Lighten up, Francis-es.
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
73057 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:11 am to
quote:

I swear you offer nothing to any board I've seen you post on.
You quote Jimmy Buffet in your signature line. You do not have the intellectual or cultural high ground to judge anyone else's commentary.

Alt. Answer 2: I exactly do not care what you think of my posts.

Posted by Grim
Member since Dec 2013
12489 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:13 am to
I'm not reading all that. Can you put it emoji form for us millenials?
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
154569 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:23 am to
quote:

We Are The People Our Parents Warned Us About ~ Jimmy Buffett
published in 1968

Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133654 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:23 am to
It was all

Then they were like omg

And they were totes

and all "ermahgerd Krimbus!"

But then they couldn't even and were all

And PEW!PEW!PEW!
This post was edited on 12/26/15 at 12:32 am
Posted by Bushmaster
19th Hole
Member since Oct 2008
39954 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:24 am to
I know its not the right era but my mom gave me a photo album of my grandpa in North Africa, France and Germany and its the best gift I have ever gotten.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
154569 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:25 am to
some badass baws up in dat bitch
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133654 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:27 am to
Could you post some pics? Or email me some? I'm fascinated by stuff like that.
Posted by Paul Allen
Montauk, NY
Member since Nov 2007
77880 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:27 am to
Franz Kafka - metamorphosis
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133654 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:28 am to
quote:

some badass baws up in dat bitch


And they didn't even need YETI tumblers.
Posted by Passing Wind
Dutchtown
Member since Apr 2015
4795 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:31 am to
And you have soccer in your name. Enough said.

Edit: also according to people on scout.com who seem to agree on your posting abilities you're old as grass
This post was edited on 12/26/15 at 12:37 am
Posted by Tuscaloosa
13x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
50505 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:35 am to
Don't forget the greatest commercial ever:

LINK
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
73057 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:37 am to
Posted by Errerrerrwere
Member since Aug 2015
44005 posts
Posted on 12/26/15 at 12:41 am to
My grandpa was in WWII as a belly gunner in the Air Force. This generation was a "we" generation, than it became a "me" generation.

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