The government of the Northern Belgium region of Flanders has created a lasting memorial in Dublin to the Irishmen who died there in World War I
The “Flanders Fields Memorial,” situated in the peace garden opposite Christchurch Cathedral - a largely unused public park owned by Dublin City Council - now has a circular memorial in place to remember the 13,000 men who lost their lives more than 100 years ago.
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Dublin memorial to 13,000 Irishmen killed in WW1 in Flanders opened https://t.co/IwlhBZOubW via @IrishTimes
— Ronan McGreevy (@RMcGreevy1301) April 30, 2019
Almost all of those who died did so in the 13 miles of the front in Ypres Salient in Flanders.
Many more Irish died in the defense of Belgium than in the creation of the Irish State.
The Lord Mayor of Dublin Councillor Nial Ring reminded those present at the opening ceremony that the peace garden was opened in 1988 at a time when there was no peace on the island of Ireland.
“People will find great solace and hopefully a time for reflection and reconciliation when they visit this place,” he said.
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The circular memorial contains a box full of Flanders soil and a brass plaque remembering the Irish who died there in the war.
The speaker of the Flemish parliament Jan Peumans read out the names of places where Irishmen fought 100 years ago, including Langemarck-Poelkapelle, Wijtschate, Messines and Menen.
Peumans said the idea for the memorial came from the minister-president of Flanders, Geert Bourgeois.
“We are here not to honor military glory. We are united in remembering the human price to safeguard our peace and human rights,” he said.
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“We are here to honor the Irishmen who came to Belgium each for reasons of their own to restore the liberties of an invaded neutral country.”
However, he stressed that the peace park was about reconciliation and acknowledged the presence of the German ambassador to Ireland Deike Potzel at the ceremony.
Irish links to Flanders
Irish links with Flanders are centuries old going back to 1298 when the Earl of Kildare sent a contingent of Irish troops in support of the Count of Flanders.
In the 16th and 17th centuries, thousands of Irishmen fought on both sides during the battles in what was then the Spanish Netherlands and the Wild Geese were involved in fighting on one of the most contested soils in Europe.
“Given the intertwining histories of Ireland and Flanders, the memorial is deeply moving and poignant and a symbol of the ties that bind us together,” Irish Minister of State for European Affairs Helen McEntee said.
Schoolchildren from Ireland, Flanders and Germany recited a prayer and then the world-famous buglers, who play every evening at the New Menin Gate in Ypres, performed the Last Post and Reveille.
The ceremony was completed with the Christchurch choir performing the European anthem "Ode to Joy."
Here is some British Pathe footage of the soldiers in camp at Flanders during World War One:
Do you think this is a fitting tribute for those who lost their lives in Flanders?
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H/T: Irish Times