This morning at
11am many people will stand silently for two minutes in memory of war dead. It's an act which includes people of all faiths or none.
The two-minute
silence wasn’t originally at 11am and it didn’t start here in the UK. Rather, it started in Cape Town, South Africa
around 1916 and there was a daily silence initiated by the daily firing of
the noon day gun on Signal Hill for a full year from 14
May 1918 to 14 May 1919 It was known as
the Two Minute Silent Pause of Remembrance.
The first minute was a time of thanksgiving
for those who had returned alive, the second minute was to remember the fallen.
To start the silence a bugler sounded
the "Last Post",
and the "Reveille" was played at the end of the
pause.
A Reuters correspondent
in Cape Town cabled a description of the event to London. Within a few weeks
Reuters' agency in Cape Town received press cables from London stating that the
ceremony had been adopted in two English provincial towns and later by others,
including in Canada and Australia.
Sir Percy Fitzpatrick was moved by the idea (he had lost a son) and his local church adopted the practice. Writing to Lord Milner, then Colonial Secretary, he proposed that this become an official part of the annual service on Armistice Day. Milner raised the idea with Lord Stamfordham, the King's Private Secretary, who informed the King, George V was enthusiastic and a press statement was released from the Palace on 7 November 1919.

Thank you for this piece. I did not realise the 2 minutes were divided into thanksgiving and remembrance
ReplyDeleteI don't think it is now. But it's what I will do this morning.
DeleteIt's a beautiful tradition, I think.
ReplyDeleteMe too. I like that it is equally for all faiths or none.
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