The Scotsman

Rememberin­g Passchenda­ele

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One hundred years ago saw the start of one of the most horrific battles in human history.

More than half a million soldiers died at Passchenda­ele, 325,000 of these Allied troops, in a battle that raged from July to November in the most grotesque conditions.

The slaughter was appalling then and almost inconceiva­ble a century later as thousands were mown down by machine gun fire within minutes of going “over the top”.

All the more reason, therefore, to mark this most grim of anniversar­ies, to remind the generation­s that followed of the huge sacrifices made, to ensure we never forget and to reinforce our commitment to striving for peaceful solutions to conflict wherever and whenever possible.

A parade and service in Crieff yesterday attended by thousands marked the heavy losses suffered by Scottish soldiers – in particular the high number of Black Watch soldiers who fought near Ypres from 31 July to 10 November 1917, in battlefiel­ds that turned to liquid mud, gaining only five miles of ground in three months.

Lest we forget…

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