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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, January 27, 2001 |
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To the unknown soldier
G. V. JOSHI
The tomb of the "Unknown Soldier" and the story behind it is
interesting. In 1916, during World War I, Francois Simon lost one
of his sons in the war against Germany and another son was
gravely injured. Moved by this. Simon organised honorary escorts
for the burial of bodies brought to Rennes from the battlefields.
He began thinking of soldiers whose bodies were not discovered
and recovered bodies that could not be identified.
In November 1916, during a ceremony honouring the war dead in
Rennes, Simon asked, "Why does not France open the doors of the
Pantheon (a historical site in Paris) to one of her unknown
warriors who gave his life in the defence of his motherland?"
The idea was taken up by a French Minister, pushed by the press,
and in 1919 given its first official approval by the Government
of France. The grave should bear only two words - "A Soldier" -
and two dates - "1914-1919".
A few days before the ceremony on November 11, 1920, the French
decided not to bury their unknown soldier in the Pantheon, but to
give him a shrine apart - beneath the Arc de Triomphe - a place
of honour. Superbly situated, the Arc commands a magnificent view
of the Champs Elysees, towering above the traffic of the Place de
l'Etoile (now renamed the Place Charles de Gaulle).
On November 9, 1920, the caskets began arriving. Silent crowds
watched eight trucks pull in. The ninth body never came; instead
word arrived that in one sector, German and French bodies were
buried in a common ground, and the commander could not be certain
of delivering a French soldier. And so he sent none.
That night the unmarked coffins resting in state, were shifted
several times to prevent identification with any sector. The
honour of making the final choice was given to a young infantry
soldier, Auguste Thin, chosen because his father was among
France's unidentified war dead. With a bunch of red and white
carnations, while Government officials watched and soldiers stood
at attention, Thin walked down the flag-draped row of caskets,
stopped before one, and placed flowers on it.
While a train carried this coffin to Paris to be invested with a
glory never before accorded to a soldier, a British destroyer was
bearing another body across the English Channel. No one knew
whether he was a soldier, a sailor or an airman, whether he was
English or from Canada or any other part of the then British
Empire. He had died in France, and had been buried in an unmarked
grave.
In a solemn ceremony at Westminster Abbey, he was reburied in
French soil - 100 bags filled with earth from the battlefields in
France. Similarly, a year later, when America's unknown soldier
was brought home, his tomb at Arlington National Cemetery,
outside Washington was constructed so that the casket rests on a
50 millimetres thick layer of French soil. The eternal flame in
the French tomb was lit in November 1923, three years after the
ceremony.
At New Delhi, at India Gate, the names of all soldiers who died
in World War I are etched.
On the marble plaza in front of the tomb at Arlington, a guard
walks back and forth, 21 steps in each direction. At the end of
each 21 steps, the soldier pauses for 21 seconds, symbolic of a
21 gun salute and walks 21 steps in the other direction.
Every hour in winter and every half an hour in summer, the guard
is changed. This is done on all days, in all seasons, in all
weather conditions, sun, rain or snow.
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