Op-Ed: This Memorial Day, Wear a Poppy To Honor Deceased War Veterans

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The weekend before Memorial Day finds many war veterans distributing poppies in order to honor the ultimate sacrifice of our nation’s veterans. In New Canaan, members of our local Veterans of Foreign War Post 653 will distribute poppies in front of ACME Market, Walter Stewart’s Market and Dunkin’ Donuts. The significance of the poppy in honoring our nation’s war dead is traced to World War I.

From the battlefields of World War I, weary soldiers brought home the memory of a barren landscape transformed by wild poppies, red as the blood that had soaked the soil. By that miracle poppy became a symbol of the sacrifice of lives in war and represented the hope that none had died in vain. The poppy has continued to bloom for the casualties wars, its petals of paper bound together for veterans by veterans, reminding America each year that the men and women who have served and died for their country deserve to be remembered. 

Although poppies have a long history of being used to honor the dead in both Greek and Roman mythology, the poppy, as a memorial flower to the war dead, can be traced to a single individual, Moina Michael. She was so moved by Lt. Col. McCrae’s poem, “In Flanders Fields,” that she wrote a response:

“. . . the blood of heroes never dies
But lends a luster to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders’ Fields.”

On impulse, she bought a bouquet of poppies – all that New York City’s Wanamaker’s Department Store had – and handed them to businessmen meeting at the New York YMCA where she worked. She asked them to wear the poppy as a tribute to the fallen. That was November 1918. World War I was over, but America’s sons would rest forever “in Flanders’ Fields.” Later she would spearhead a campaign that would result in the adoption of the poppy as the national symbol of sacrifice.

This Memorial Day, honor our war dead by wearing a poppy proudly and remember the grave sacrifice many have made while fighting for the freedom we all revere. 

Respectfully,

Leon Krolikowski, 

Member, Post 653, New Canaan VFW

2 thoughts on “Op-Ed: This Memorial Day, Wear a Poppy To Honor Deceased War Veterans

  1. Thank you Mr. Krolikowski, brave veteran and defendant of America, for this important expression of remembrance that every citizen of our country should take to heart. Let us also remember those heroes who have given their legs, arms, brains, in our defense and their care givers to whom we owe our forever gratitude.

  2. Marching in New Canaan’s Memorial Day since childhood now with DAR. Remembering my 28 NCHS class 65 who served valiantly in an undeclared war Vietnam, yet are patriotic to wear the poppy.

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