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from The
Guardian Saturday 28 October 2000
A final salute for 12 unknown
soldiers returned to the earth of Flanders
Remains
of men who fell at Ypres found after 85 years
Ian Black
in Boezinge, Belgium
It was just another
cemetery: neat tombstones, a memorial arch and the haunting words:
"Their name liveth for evermore>"
But under a wintry
Flanders sun a poignant record was set this week with the biggest burial of
unknown British soldiers in decades.
More than 80 years on,
they are still anonymous, victims and perhaps heroes of the charnel house
that was the first world war. They were given an honourable send-off, but in
12 pitifully small boxes lowered carefully into the damp clay.
Scenes like this have
been going on since 1918. And though a staggering 100,000 Commonwealth
soldiers are still missing - listed on the Menin Gate at Ypres and the
nearby memorial at Tyne Cot - it is rare for more than one or two to be
interred at once.
Burial on such a large
scale is the result of unique circumstances. The undulating land where the
remains were found, by a canal at Boezinge, is being used to extend the
unlovely industrial estate of Ypres - "Wipers" to the men who
fought and died here during three offensives over a few miles of ground.
But the land has been
used only for grazing since the guns fell silent. Since last summer Belgian
archaeologists, keeping one step ahead of the bulldozers, have unearthed 103
victims, 39 British, the rest French and German.
The 12 buried on
Thursday included an officer from the Yorks and Lancaster Regiment, two
Lancashire Fusiliers, a Northumberland Fusilier and three rifle brigade
soldiers - identified by scraps of clothing or a badge, but nothing to give
them a name.
"It's the biggest
single find in recent memory," said Barry Murphy, of the Commonwealth
war graves commission, which runs the Cement Hill cemetery and scores of
others like it across Belgium and France. "We are talking
decades."
Twelve wooden boxes,
each smaller than a child's coffin, were lined up on green baize before the
brief ceremony, conducted by the Reverend Ray Jones, a former soldier and
now chaplain of St George's Memorial Church, Ypres.
"It's very
strange," Mr Jones said, surplice fluttering in the stiff autumn
breeze. "There are times when a burial is extremely moving and others
when you being to distance yourself from it.
"But you can't do
that here. Being an ex-soldier makes me feel it's more emotive."
Nothing special was laid
on. But the smart salutes of two uniformed officers - a Greenjackets representative
for the now disbanded rifle brigades and a colonel from the British embassy
in Brussels - were a reminder that these men had died on duty.
So too were the poppy
wreaths, laid slowly by the edge of the neat, deep trench cut so carefully
into the Flanders earth.
Two buglers - men of the
Ypres fire brigade who perform nightly at the Menin Gate - sounded the Last
Post and Reveille.
Otherwise there was just
silence, broken by the roar of passing traffic, a few passing battlefield
tourists, cemetery workers, veterans, local historians and a couple of
saluting Belgian officers. It was respectful, but no-one knew who they were
mourning.
Boezinge was the scene
of heavy fighting during three separate offensives around Ypres, where the
allied salient protruded into German lines. Most of the men found since last
summer died in early June 1915. Only one has been identified.
The final attack, in
November 1917, through mud which swallowed soldiers, horses and tanks, took
the ruins of Passchendaele, a village which by then no longer existed.
Typically a box of remains contains bones, wet uniform fragments, leather,
buttons, shaving brushes, even overcoats.
Uncovering them is the
passion of Aurel Sercu, a retired teacher who spends his Saturdays with
fellow members of the Diggers group, operating under licence from the
Belgian ministry of interior. He was at Thursday's burial to pay his last
respects.
"It is very careful
work, because you realise you are dealing with mortal remains," said Mr
Sercu, 55, who once found five bodies at the bottom of a trench he had
excavated.
"I'm not sure if
satisfaction is the right word," he said, "But it does give you a
sense of pride that these poor guys are finally going to a decent grave
after 80 years in the soil."
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