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These pictures were taken in 1998 on a visit to Ypres. in memory of the 80th anniversary of the end of the First World War |

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These are what remains of the WW1 trenches. It is unimaginable what the young men of this generation had to live through. |





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Ready to play the Last Post. This is done every night at the Menin gate in Ypres |

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Young people showing respect |

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The Menin Gate, Ypres |
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The Menin Gate Memorial in Ypres commemorates those soldiers of the British Commonwealth - with the exception of New Zealand and Newfoundland - who fell in the Ypres Salient during the First World War before 16 August 1917, who have no known grave. Those who died from that date - and all from New Zealand and Newfoundland - are commemorated elsewhere.The memorial's location is especially poignant as it lies on the eastward route from the town which allied soldiers would have taken towards the fighting - many never to return. Every evening since 1928, at precisely eight o'clock, traffic around the imposing arches of the Menin Gate Memorial has been stopped while the Last Post is sounded beneath the Gate by the local fire brigade. This tribute is given in honour of the memory of British Empire soldiers who fought and died there. The Menin Gate in Ypres only records the soldiers for whom there is no known grave, As graves are discovered, the names are removed from the Menin Gate. The ceremony was prohibited by occupying German forces during the Second World War, but it was resumed on the very evening of liberation — 6 September 1944 — notwithstanding the heavy fighting that still went on in other parts of the town. The lions that marked the original gate were given to Australia by the people of Belgium and can be found at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. "Who will remember, passing through this Gate,The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?" -- Siegfried Sassoon, On Passing the Menin Gate Wikipedia |

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This is only one of many cemetaries for those who fell in WW1 |

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And we remember the young men who are still laying down their lives in war |







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