Respect the soldier, detest the war.
I took this photo of Bampa, my grandfather in 2003, when he had left his home and friends, everything he knew, to live with my mum, here in Canada, after my Nanna passed away. I can’t imagine how hard it was for him to leave; leaving meant he lost his independence in many ways: he loved to take a quick jaunt up the street, gather raspberries in his garden or go for a drive to town to fetch something or other. He never got a Canadian driver’s license.
Respect the bravery, detest the policies.
It’s not only my grandfather who was in uniform; my dad’s eldest brother was a member of the United States Armed Forces, now retired, he served as an orthopedic surgeon. One of my husband’s brothers, also retired, had been a Major in the Pakistani Army. While we abhor war, its causalities, along with the capitalist, racist and colonizing policies that start them, we have high regard for those that choose to serve this way. Our hearts are such that we can hold dichotomies.
Respect the service, detest the battles.
Bampa was a quiet man, preferring to observe and listen, rather than talk. Happy to sit back with ease, never wanting to be the center of attention. A very admirable and increasingly rare quality. When he would tire of hearing the conversations around him, he would turn off his hearing aids and retreat into own world or pick up a book. Bombs blasting near him during the war, made him deaf in one ear and partially deaf in the other. I’m sure he dealt with symptoms of PTSD until he died and sometimes it’s better to tune out the noisy world.
Respect the hope, detest the pain.
John Hastings served as a paratrooper for the British Royal Army. Before he died, he recalled his “life” story, stenographed and edited by his daughter, my mum. In it, he regales us with tales from his childhood, marriage and war days. One especially poignant passage recounts that when in Tunisia, where his brigade was doing night drops over the Atlas Mountains, “…one day out on a keep fit march, we stopped at an orange grove, very soon one of the Arab workers appeared waving his hands around. We had expected him to be mad at us, but he went and picked some of the best oranges I have ever tasted; we marched back with loads of them tucked in our shirts.”
Respect the causalities, detest the consequences.
In the past several years, in many online writing groups with fellow participants spanning the globe, I have had the privilege of reading poems and passages by veterans – war leaves its marks. On the body, on the psyche, on the soul. Bampa worked as a carpenter after the war. He worked in London, a good 4-5 hour bus drive away from his home. He was away from his family a lot. War leaves its mark on families. His stories, many of them cheeky, most matter-of-fact, leave out a lot of feeling. War it seems can numb people to their feelings, starting another longer, lonelier war inside themselves. I only hope Bampa was able to let some of it out through his walks, while washing the dishes and making jam, through telling his stories and laughing with his grandkids. Though Bampa wasn’t demonstrably affectionate with hugs, I knew he loved us by actions like speaking up for us, little things he sent to us from across the pond, and his acts of service. Spend time with your grandparents if they are still with you – really listen to their stories and listen for what is not said too. Tell them you appreciate them and the sacrifices they made, the hardships they endured. You want to understand yourself? Learn your family’s stories.
Respect the sacrifices, detest the occupation.
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“But in the end, stories are about one person saying to another: This is the way it feels to me. Can you understand what I’m saying? Does it feel this way to you?” ~ Kazuo Ishiguro










