Remembrance Week at The Buckingham School
The Buckingham School marked the 100 years anniversary of the end of the First World War with a fitting and moving Remembrance service, on Friday 9th November.
The service, entirely led by students, paid tribute to those who died during the First World War, including 95 soldiers from Buckingham and the surrounding villages.
The service started with all students and staff paying their respects by attaching a poppy onto the fence of the main playground. Written on the poppies were names of soldiers who died during the war, with many including the names of family relatives. The sight of 1000 poppies was striking and set the tone for the rest of the service.
Tom Hardy, Year 13, led the ceremony with a powerful and poignant speech which emphasised the reasons we remember, speaking of the freedoms we have today and linking this to why people went to war in 1914.
It was touching and inspiring that only students spoke or performed as part of the ceremony. It should not be taken for granted that 100 years on, young people today will remember a past they were not part of, yet all the young people at The Buckingham School showed a deep understanding of how this past links to today and to their own lives.
The ceremony included a number of performances and readings of poems. The school’s choir performed two songs; a group of dancers dedicated their piece to the wives, mothers, daughters, girlfriends and friends who received the telegram no one wanted to receive; and the poems ‘The Soldier’ by Rupert Brooke and ‘My Boy Jack’ by Rudyard Kipling were read, while 1000 students and staff listened in silence.
Appropriately, the ceremony ended with a beautiful rendition of The Last Post, played on flute by Abi Pearce (Year 11), and then a two-minute silence to remember the fallen.
It is safe to say that the positive repercussions for the student body of an event such as this one will last for a long time.
Mr Mandel, Subject Leader of PSHE