Lest We Forget

in #lestweforget4 years ago (edited)

Tomorrow, November 11, is Rememberance Day/ Veteran's Day.

On the eleventh day, of the eleventh month at the eleventh hour (11.A.M.) please stop for a moment to give thanks to our brave men and women who fought and gave their lives for the freedom we enjoy today. There are many ceremonies and parades in different communities to honour and remember those who served. Wreaths are placed at the cenotaphs for our fallen soldiers. Mothers, who have lost their son or daughter who served in recent wars, are honoured.

The statue in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada to honour the men and women of WW1, WW11 and the Korean War.


image


This is the poppy I have been wearing on my jacket since last week. They are available at the legions and as I look around the town I see most people, young and old, are sporting one.


image



My father, two of his brothers and many cousins left Canada for Overseas to take part in WW11. My mother, from Co. Mayo. Ireland, was a nurse in England when the war was on.

Here’s a photo of them around the time we were married during the war in 1943.


image



When my father was living, even at 85 years old, he always dressed up in his legion jacket and cap and marched in the Rememberance Day parade that was held at his hometown. Not many of the soldiers from that war left now.

One way I pay tribute is to whip up a wartime recipe of a War Cake. I plan to make one tomorrow.

In wartime certain foods such as eggs, sugar, butter and milk were rationed. The cake is made with simple ingredients and often was wrapped up and sent overseas for the soldiers in the trenches by a member of the family.



image
source



#Recipe for War Cake:

Boil together on stove for 3 minutes- 2 cups water, 2 cups raisins, 1 cup molasses.

  • add 2/3 cup of shortening while mixture still warm.

Let mixture cool-

Add:

  • 3 cups flour
  • 1 tsp. baking powder.
  • 1 tsp baking soda dissolved in 1 tsp. hot water
  • 3 tsp cinnamon

Mix thoroughly and put in greased tube pan or 2 loaf pans in 350 degree preheated oven. Bake approximately 1 hour.

When cake is removed from oven a glaze can be put on while it is still warm by saving a couple Tblp. of the boiled water mixture and add a drop of vanilla, some icing sugar, pinch of salt. Make sure it is thin enough to drizzle gently over the cake.

Enjoy the War Cake with a nice cup of tea or coffee and let us not forget.



#thealliance




PHC-Footer-05.gif



image

Sort:  

Hey @redheadpei

Great job highlighting this. Lots of memorial stuff going on in the UK. My football team for one, with a decent ceremony before the match, including a minute silence.

Thanks for sharing

Gaz

Posted using Partiko Android

Thanks @cheese4ead! Kudos to your football team for the Rememberance ceremony and minute of silence. So important for the soldiers then and now.
Blessings!

Thank you for telling us about your father and mother and their service during WWII. I'm sure the cakes were very much appreciated by the soldiers receiving them!

Welcome @free-reign. 😊 Yes, the simple ingredients of the cake makes a lovely treat.

My parents were both children in the war - in England and Scotland. I had coffee this morning with an amazing woman who also grew up in the UK in the war. As you know, the aftermath of the war lasted for years and when she and her husband (to whom she's been married for more than 60 years), went on their first date, she was in her school uniform. It was all the family could afford and the best clothes that she had.

Thanks for the lovely story, Fiona. Yes, England was devastated during the war with all the bombs raining down on them.

You're welcome. And parts of Scotland. My father was evacuated from Glasgow during the war. he was about 10 - to a poultry farm.

That's a great story. Love the picture of your parents!

My grandfather emigrated to Canada from what is now Ukraine as an infant in 1917, with his mother, right after the Russian Revolution. They were mennonite, and they found other mennonites in western Canada (there are a lot).

He volunteered to serve in WWII and met my grandmother in England. He was one of the soldiers who landed on Juno Beach on D-Day. He never, ever, spoke about it.

Thanks WW. a wonderful story of your grandparents. I think a lot of them didn’t speak of it as they witnessed so much death And violence of fellow man.

My uncle was with the medics, carrying the dead a and wounded off the battlefield. He was never the same after and had horrid nightmares, waking up in terror after he returned to Canada.

There are many Amish people settling here ( coming from Ontario) and bringing old farms to life again and some Mennonites settling at the other end of the Island.

Did your parents follow the Mennonite way of life?

No, most definitely not. For volunteering to serve in the army my grandfather was essentially shunned from the Mennonite community, and my parents divorced before I have any memory at all. I was raised very dysfunctionally. :)

Haha WW. I think we all have a bit of dysfunction...some more than a bit.
Definitely an interesting family tree . Your grandfather was a brave man and he was better off without a group of people who shunned him for his devotion to fight for the future of his country.💕 ❤️

We still call it Poppy day or Armistice Day, so many lives lost or destroyed through the war! Lovely photo and what a lovely way to bring honour to your parents with that War Cake, very special photo too!

Posted using Partiko Android

Thank so much @lizelle for your lovely comments. ❤️

awesome tribute and recipe! @tipu curate

Thanks so much @blueeyes8960 and for the tipu. 💞 I made the cake and when Hubs came in from outside he wondered what I was cooking -said the house smelled wonderful.

Thanks for the recipe) It's good that there is a memory of the past!

Welcome @amalinavia! I made the war cake today and it turned out nicely.

An important time to remember not only the sacrifice of those who died in past wars... but also the devestation and futility of war in general. Of course, there were noble causes... but in the end, there is so much that is lost.

So true, Bengy. Much was lost and I am forever grateful and thankful of the sacrifices made and the freedom we have here because of it.

A beautiful photo of your parents Jo!! It is good to remember the many who fought and gave their lives for us and freedom! A lovely post with important sentiment!! War cake looks delicious and I'm sure it is. I'm sure it was a real treat then and even today!! 😊 💞

Thanks Dee! I’m happy you liked ❤️ it. It’s so important for us to keep their sacrifice alive and not let anyone take away the freedom they fought And many died for.

I made the cake today and it was quite nice. 😃

You are very welcome Jo! I totally agree! 🙂 💞

Congratulations @redheadpei! This post has been featured in today's Power House Creatives curation post!

You can find the community announcement on Discord :) and it has also been shared on our FB Page and Twitter feed.

PHC-Footer-05.gif

Much appreciated @steemitbloggers! ❤️ 💗 😘

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.29
TRX 0.11
JST 0.033
BTC 63901.15
ETH 3133.40
USDT 1.00
SBD 4.05