Kentish Express Ashford & District - What's On

Fitting tribute in the sand to a nation’s fallen heroes

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Hollywood director Danny Boyle is inviting you to join hundreds on a Kent beach to remember the First World War fallen in a unique way for the centenary of the Armistice this weekend. Senior Features Writer Angela Cole spoke to him as he prepared for a nation’s tribute

The poignant moment thousands of troops took their last steps on Blighty before heading to fight in the First World War will be remembered in a unique way this weekend.

For the centenary of the Armistice, when war finally ended, Hollywood director Danny Boyle will swap blockbuste­rs for the beach in a one-off nationwide gesture of remembranc­e for the men and women who left their home shores for the conflict. After weeks of research, the director’s project, Pages of the Sea, which was commission­ed by 14-18 NOW, will feature images of some of the soldiers who left, created in the sand, before they are washed away by the tide, of Sunday, November 11.

The public is invited to join artists from Sand In Your Eye as they create the portraits - weather permitting - on 32 beaches around the UK, which in Kent will be at Folkestone’s Sunny Sands.

From early Sunday morning, an image of Wilfred Owen - who left for the Western Front from the beach at Folkestone - will be etched into the sand and as the tide rises, onlookers can watch as it is washed away, taking a moment to say a collective goodbye. The director became fascinated by the soldiers’ stories while working on the project and particular­ly the poet.

“We wanted to try and connect the communitie­s with their beach,” he said. “Wilfred Owen left from here. He swam on this beach the night before he left - and he never returned. When you find out stuff like this it makes it so real; it touches you.”

And the man behind the likes of Slumdog Millionair­e and Trainspott­ing chose Folkestone to launch his call to action last month with the Creative Foundation, announcing that key beaches across the country would have a large scale portrait of a casualty from the conflict drawn in the sand by artists from Sand In Your Eye. In conjunctio­n with Folkestone’s Creative Foundation, and with 14-18 NOW - the UK’S arts programme for the centenary, Mr Boyle asked people to gather on beaches for the informal, nationwide gesture of remembranc­e.

He added: “Beaches are great democratic places. Nobody

‘You can stand here on the beach in Folkestone and imagine what they were feeling as they were getting ready to leave’

rules other than the tide. We can all gather here and do crazy things like swim in the winter. You can stand here on the beach in Folkestone and imagine what they were all feeling and imagining as they were getting ready to leave and thinking about what they were facing.”

“They seem the perfect place to gather and say a final goodbye and thank you to those whose lives were taken or forever changed by the First World War. I’m inviting people to watch as the faces of the fallen are etched in the sand, and for communitie­s to come together to remember the sacrifices that were made.” Poet Carol Ann Duffy has been invited to write a new poem, which will be read by individual­s, families and communitie­s as they gather on the beach called The Wound in Time.

The public is also invited to visit an online gallery to select someone to say a personal goodbye to either via social media or on the beaches from the Imperial War Museum’s Lives of the First World War at livesofthe­firstworld­war.org

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