Remembering the horror that led to ‘In Flanders Fields’ - podcast episode cover

Remembering the horror that led to ‘In Flanders Fields’

Nov 11, 201922 min
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Episode description

Over 104 years ago, as the First World War raged around him, a Canadian surgeon sat in an ambulance in a part of Belgium that had already seen more than its fair share of carnage and fighting and would see a whole lot more through the rest of the 20th Century. Poppies surround a newly unveiled statue of Lt.-Col. John McCrae to commemorate the Second Battle of Ypres and his poem 'In Flanders Fields,' during a ceremony in Ottawa on Sunday, May 3, 2015, 100 years to the day that he wrote his famous poem.(Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press) Taking a brief respite from the horror he had just witnessed, the surgeon, a Canadian named John McCrae, wrote a poem that lives to this day--in elementary schools where young Canadians recite it, to the poppies that people around the world wear to commemorate those who died in the so-called Great War. Born out of heartache, written in the midst of insanity in the spring of 1915, In Flanders Fields may be the most famous poem ever written by a Canadian. David Calderisi (courtesy of David Calderisi) For Remembrance Day, I asked a friend, noted Canadian actor David Calderisi, to share both the poem and the history of its origins. Be forewarned: like the war from which is sprang, it is not a pretty history. ListenEN_Interview_4-20191111-WIE40
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