Poppy Campaign

Remembrance is the cornerstone of The Royal Canadian Legion's work in Canada.  The Poppy Campaign is a major source of funds used to assist veterans, ex-service members and their dependents.

Lest we forget ...

   Additional Information about the Campaign and the Poppy   

  HISTORY OF THE POPPY  

   THE POPPY...THE FLOWER OF REMEMBRANCE  

  FLOWER OF REMEMBRANCE: SYMBOL OF UNITY  

  PLEASE WEAR A POPPY  

  VETERANS... PAST & PRESENT  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Information about the Campaign and the Poppy

  • What does the poppy represent?   The poppy represents the symbol of Remembrance.


  • Why should I wear a poppy?   When you wear a poppy or display a wreath you honour the war dead and help ex-service personnel and their dependents.


  • How do I help needy ex-service personnel and their dependents? The basic purpose of poppy funds is to provide immediate assistance to ex-service personnel in need.  This may include food, shelter or medical attention for them or their families.  Also bursaries are granted to children and grandchildren of ex-service personnel.


  • Are there any other uses for poppy funds?   Yes.   Poppy funds can be used for low-rental housing and care facilities for elderly or disabled persons and their dependents, community medical appliances and medical research, day care centres, meals-on-wheels, transportation and related services for veterans, their dependants and the aged.   Donations may be given for relief of disasters declared by the federal or provincial governments.


  • Aren't ex-service personnel eligible for government pensions?   Yes.   Many ex-service personnel do get pensions, but many others, although handicapped, do not.  However, no pension can provide for eventualities such as fire, a long illness on the part of the breadwinner or other medical expenses.


  • Do you have to be a Legion member to get help from the poppy fund?  No.  Any ex-service personnel or dependant is eligible to apply for financial aid from the poppy fund.  The poppy funds also support the Legion service bureaux, and a large number of service bureau cases involve people who are not Legion members.


  • What are Service Bureaux?   Throughout the Legion, in some 1,720 branches in ten provincial commands, and in Ottawa, there are service officers whose job it is to assist ex-service persons or dependents with problems relating to disability pensions or other veterans' legislation.  The national and provincial offices not only provide advice but act on behalf of the individual.  Every year thousands of representations are placed before the federal government on behalf of "clients" .  There is no charge for this service which is available to any ex-service personnel or dependent who can qualify for such assistance.


  • Does all the money raised through the distribution of poppies and wreaths go into poppy funds?   After expenses, such as the cost of poppies, wreaths and other supplies are deducted, all remaining monies are placed in trust to be used on those purposes authorized in the General By-laws of The Royal Canadian Legion.


  • Can poppy money be used for anything else?   The Legion's constitution stresses that poppy funds must be held in trust.  They are subscribed to by the public.  They are held in a bank account separate from that of the branch and cannot be used for any purpose other than those stipulated.


  • Are campaign expenses high?  Campaign expenses are unusually low because most of the work is voluntary.


  • How much should I give?  We suggest that you give according to the dictates of your conscience.    You might remember that the cost of all the things the poppy fund provides is much higher today; therefore, it takes more money to do the same job.


When you give to the poppy campaign
you remember the war dead
and help the living and the dependents of those
who have served our country.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HISTORY OF THE POPPY

Why was the poppy chosen as the symbol of remembrance for Canada's war dead?

The poppy, an international symbol for those who died in war, also had international origins.

A writer first made the connection between the poppy and battlefield deaths during the Napoleonic wars of the early 19th century, remarking that fields that were barren before battle exploded with the blood-red flowers after the fighting ended.

Prior to the First World War few poppies grew in Flanders.  During the tremendous bombardments of that war the chalk soils became rich in lime from rubble, allowing 'popaver rhoeas' to thrive.  When the war ended the lime was quickly absorbed, and the poppy began to disappear again.

Lieut-Col. John McCrae, the Canadian doctor who wrote the poem IN FLANDERS FIELDS, made the same connection 100 years later, during the First World War, and the scarlet poppy quickly became the symbol for soldiers who died in battle.

Three years later an American, Moina Michael, was working in a New York City YMCA canteen when she started wearing a poppy in memory of the millions who died on the battlefield. During a 1920 visit to the United States a French woman, Madame Guerin, learned of the custom.   On her return to France she decided to use handmade poppies to raise money for the destitute children in war-torn areas of the country.  In November 1921, the first poppies were distributed in Canada.

Thanks to the millions of Canadians who wear flowers each November, the little red plant has never died.  And neither have Canadian's memories for 116,031 of their countrymen who died in battle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE POPPY...THE FLOWER OF REMEMBRANCE

Each November, over thirteen million poppies blossom in Canada.  They blossom on the jackets, dresses and hats of nearly half the Canadian population and they have blossomed for almost 75 years, since 1921.  The poppy is the symbol that individuals use to show that they remember those who were killed in the wars and peace keeping operations that Canada has been involved in.

The association of the poppy to those who had been killed in war had existed for at least 110 years prior to being adopted in Canada.  There are records of a correspondent who, during the Napoleonic War, wrote of how thickly poppies grew over the graves of soldiers in the area of Flanders, France.

The person, who more than any other, that was responsible for the adoption of the poppy in Canada was a Canadian Medical Officer during the First World War.  This person was Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae of Guelph, Ontario.

John McCrae was a tall, boyish 43-year -old member of the Canadian Medical Corps.  He was an artillery veteran of the Boer War in South Africa and was described as a person with the eye of a gunner, the hand of a surgeon, and the soul of a poet when he went into the line at Ypres on the 22nd of April 1915.

April 22, was the first time that the enemy used poison gas, but the first attack failed and and so did the next wave and the next.   In fact, for 17 days and nights the allies repulsed wave after wave of the attacking enemy.  McCrae wrote - "One can see the dead lying there on the front field. And in places where the enemy threw in an attack, they lie very thick on the slopes of the German trenches."

Lieutenant-Colonel McCrae, worked from a dressing station on the bank of the Yser Canal, dressing hundreds of wounded and never removed his clothes for the entire 17 days.  At times the dead and wounded actually rolled down the bank from above his dugout.  At other times, while awaiting the arrival of batches of wounded, he would watch the men at work in the burial plots which were quickly filling up.  In time, McCrae and his unit were relieved and he wrote home " We are weary in body and wearier in mind.  The general impression in my mind is one of a nightmare".

Lieutenant-Colonel McCrae came away from Ypres with 13 lines scrawled on a scrap of paper.  The lines were a poem which started: "In Flanders fields the poppies blow..."

These were the lines which are enshrined in the innermost thoughts and hearts of all soldiers who hear them. John McCrae was their voice.  The poem circulated as a folk song, by word of mouth and all who hear it are deeply touched.   In the United States for example, the poem inspired the American Legion to also adopt the poppy as the symbol of Remembrance.

In Canada, the poppy was officially adopted by the Great War Veterans Association in 1921 on the suggestion of a Mrs. E. Guerin, a French citizen.  But there is little doubt that the impact of John McCrae's poem influenced this decision.

The poem speaks of Flanders fields, but the subject is universal - the fear of the dead that they will be forgotten, that their death will have been in vain.  Remembrance, as symbolized by the poppy, is our eternal answer which belies that fear.

Sadly, Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae died of pneumonia at Wimereux near Boulogne, France on the 28th of January 1918 when he was 44 years old.

IN FLANDERS FIELDS

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

    John McCrae

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FLOWER OF REMEMBRANCE: SYMBOL OF UNITY

On November 11th Canadians all across the country will stop and pay tribute to the men and women killed in Canada's wars and military operations.  Some will remember friends and relatives long dead.  Others - like yourselves perhaps - will pause in tribute but will really have nothing to remember.

For millions of Canadians the poppy has long been the flower of Remembrance.   It originally was a reminder of the blood-red flower which grew in the fields where many Canadians died in a place called Flanders.  It remains the flower of Remembrance.

In schoolrooms across Canada for a number of years students have discussed Remembrance; recognizing the sacrifices which others made for Canada but unsure of how they themselves could respond.   What could they do? How could they live up to the expectations of the men and women who gave their lives for Canada and future generations?  Today, there is an answer.  It was always there only now it can be seen much more clearly.   It has to do with unity.

Canadian unity is not as strong today as it once was.   When men from all parts of Canada came to a place called Vimy Ridge in 1917 everybody said that it was impossible to take the Ridge from the enemy.  In a very important battle on a very cold day the Canadians did what nobody thought was possible.  They took Vimy Ridge. When the guns stopped, the Canadians were very happy.  Not so much for the victory itself but for the difficult thing they had done together.   They were proud to be Canadians.  Some of them who were wounded and waiting to be shipped to hospital lay on stretchers in tunnels in the earth.  They carved maple leaves on the wall.  It was a good time to be a Canadian.

In another war when the guns stopped at a place called Dieppe, the Canadians suffered a terrible defeat.  This time Canadians from East and West shared a defeat.  And as the wounded, ragged soldiers were marched away to prison camps, they marched proudly, knowing that they had shared something difficult.  It was a sad time to be a Canadian.  Thousands of young men from all parts of Canada faced death together at Dieppe.  You can see their graves and read their names on the stones.  The stones speak eloquently of racial and religious origins.   They speak of men with a common cause: Canada.

In Canadian schoolrooms today there are students whose parents, or even themselves, remember other wars.   Some remember the terrible ordeal of escaping to freedom.  To them the poppy can be a symbol of that freedom.   But it is important for all of us to remember that unity of Canadians in wartime enables all of us to enjoy freedom.

Although Canada now has repatriated her constitution, the spirit of a common cause is lacking. We no longer share difficult things with a sense of unity.  The poppy, then, is a reminder of the need: a challenge to each of us to seek out that spirit of unity which sustained our forefathers and our country.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PLEASE WEAR A POPPY

"Please wear a poppy," the lady said
And held one forth, but I shook my head.
Then I stopped and watched as she offered them there,
And her face was old and lined with care;
But beneath the scars the years had made
There remained a smile that refused to fade.

A boy came whistling down the street,
Bouncing along on care-free feet.
His smile was full of joy and fun,
"Lady," said he, "may I have one?"
When she's pinned it on he turned to say,
"Why do we wear a poppy today?"

The lady smiled in her wistful way
And answered, "This is Remembrance Day,
And the poppy there is the symbol for
The gallant men who died in war.
And because they did, you and I are free -
That's why we wear a poppy, you see.

"I had a boy about your size,
With golden hair and big blue eyes.
He loved to play and jump and shout,
Free as a bird he would race about.
As the years went by he learned and grew
and became a man - as you will, too.

He was fine and strong, with a boyish smile,
But he'd seemed with us such a little while
When war broke out and he went away.
I still remember his face that day
When he smiled at me and said, Goodbye,
I'll be back soon, Mom, so please don't cry.

"But the war went on and he had to stay,
And all I could do was wait and pray.
His letters told of the awful fight,
(I can see it still in my dreams at night),
With the tanks and guns and cruel barbed wire,
And the mines and bullets, the bombs and fire.

"Till at last, at last, the war was won-
And that's why we wear a poppy son."
The small boy turned as if to go,
Then said, "Thanks, lady, I'm glad to know.
That sure did sound like an awful fight,
But your son - did he come back all right?"

A tear rolled down each faded cheek;
She shook her head, but didn't speak.
I slunk away in a sort of shame,
And if you were me you'd have done the same;
For our thanks, in giving, if oft delayed,
Thought our freedom was bought - and thousands paid!

And so when we see a poppy worn,
Let us reflect on the burden borne,
By those who gave their very all
When asked to answer their country's call
That we at home in peace might live.
Then wear a poppy! Remember - and give!

by Don Crawford

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

VETERANS... PAST & PRESENT

Forever

Remembered

Veterans of the Past

And the Present