الثلاثاء، 8 نوفمبر 2011

Who, What, Why: Which countries wear poppies?


England footballers are not allowed to wear poppies when playing Spain at the weekend, says world football's governing body, Fifa. So what countries wear poppies to respect the war dead?
Premier League footballers were sporting poppies stitched on to their shirts while playing last weekend, but there will be no such gesture when England take on Spain at Wembley on Saturday, the day before Remembrance Sunday.
A Fifa edict says wearing them would break the rules about displaying political symbols, prompting the British sports minister Hugh Robertson to write a letter of complaint.
But the practice of wearing a poppy at this time of year is not solely a British one. Indeed, the adoption of the poppy had a very international birth.
In November 1918, a poem by Canadian military doctor John McCrae inspired American humanitarian Moina Michael to wear and distribute poppy pins in honour of fallen soldiers.n Flanders Fields describes the first sign of life after death - small red plants that grew on the graves of soldiers buried in northern France and Belgium during World War I.
Two days before the armistice agreement was signed, Ms Michael bought and then pinned a red poppy to her coat. She gave other poppies out to ex-servicemen at the YMCA headquarters in New York where she worked.
Poppy pins were officially recognized as a national symbol two years later when it was adopted by the American Legion at a conference. At the conference, a French woman named Madame E Guerin saw an opportunity for orphans and widows to raise money in France by selling the poppies.
Since then, poppy pins have become an international symbol of remembering fallen soldiers, especially in Commonwealth countries.he Royal British Legion, which adopted the pin in 1921, distributed 45 million poppy pins in 2010 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. This year, it hopes to raise £40m in donations, which will be used to assist veterans.
Three million poppy pins are sent to 120 countries outside the UK, says Nick Buckley, head of the legion's Poppy Appeal.
These are mostly for British ex-pats living in countries such as Spain, Germany and France, he says. But the poppies, which are made in a factory in London and sent to British embassies in countries as varied as Argentina, Kazakhstan and Sri Lanka, are sometimes used by the local community as well.
In Scotland, about 5 million poppies are distributed each year by Poppyscotland, but they look slightly different. Unlike the standard two petals and a single green leaf, the Scottish ones have four petals and no leaf.
The Scottish poppy pin "is botanically correct," says Leigh James, spokeswoman for Poppyscotland. There's also a financial reason for the difference - adding a leaf would cost an extra £15,000 a year.
South Africa has seen a recent boom in the popularity of poppy pins, says Mariette Venter, national secretary at the South Africa Legion, which distributes the pins there. "The poppy pin is now taking root here," she says.After a recent visit from Prince Charles who wore the pin on his lapel, the legion saw a spike in phone calls from people asking where they could get one. The legion in South Africa had 300,000 poppies shipped from England's poppy pin factory this year, along with 50 wreaths to be used in local ceremonies.
Ms Venter says she also sent 200 poppies to Malawi for use in celebrations there.
Canada is distributing 18 million poppy pins for Remembrance Day this year, says Bob Butt of the Royal Canadian Legion. Like Scotland, Canadian poppy pins, which are made in Toronto, have four petals with a black centre and no leaf.
In New Zealand, Poppy Day falls on the Friday before Anzac Day, which earlier this years was 25 April.

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