White Poppy
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The White Poppy is used as a symbol of peace, worn as an alternative to the red poppy for Remembrance Day. It is worn to remember all victims of war.
In 1926, a few years after the introduction of the red poppy in the UK, the idea of pacifists making their own poppies was put forward by a member of the No More War Movement (and that the black centre of the British Legion's red poppies should be imprinted with "No More War"). Nothing seems to have come of this, until in 1933 the Women's Co-operative Guild introduced the White Poppy; their intention was to remember the war dead (as with the red poppy), but with the added meaning of a hope for the end of all wars.
The White Poppy was at first produced by the Co-operative Wholesale Society, because the British Legion refused to be associated with its manufacture. In 1934 the recently-formed Peace Pledge Union joined the CWS in production of the poppies, and eventually took over production and distribution altogether. The annual White Poppy appeal is still run by the PPU.
[edit] External links
- News articles
- BBC: Red poppy 'less Christian' claim
- CBC: White poppy emblems anger Edmonton veterans
- Globe and Mail: Legion takes on activists in War of the Poppies
- Reuters: Red vs white: battle of poppies erupts in Canada
- The Guardian: Red poppy is 'politically correct'
- Ekklesia: Father of dead Canadian soldier supports White Poppy
- Ekklesia: Newspaper and former defence secretary back freedom to choose red or white poppy