Tuesday, October 2, 2012

P Day in Ieper with the Antwerpen and Gent Districts

The Kortrijk Branch President lives in Ieper, Belgium.  He offered to take the missionaries on a day tour of Flanders Fields and WWI battle sights.  It was great!  The trenches are something I have often wondered about.  Also, the famed "Christmas cease fire and singing of Silent Night".  Well, I got to look over the wooded area that was once a battlefield where that took place. 

Here are just a few of our pictures of the day. 

 Sister Hinchcliff, Sister Robinson, President Robinson, Elder Van Rij, Elder Ombach, Elder Praag, Elder Klippel, Elder Huff with the Book of Mormon held high, Elder Moscon in the shadow, Elder Stoddard, Elder Farmer, Elder Mathis, Elder Merrill, and Sister Jones.  Kneeling is one of our tour guides, a member of the Kortrijd Branch.

 Elder Huff and his Book of Mormon with President outside the city of Ieper.  The old part of this interesting city is within that huge wall and surrounded with water. 


 The whole group---again.

 Then, to the war sights,  Hill 62

 We visited Hill 62.  One of the main strong holds of the British forces during WWI.  These trenches and shell holes are original, they have been preserved, they have not be recreated.  This is all authentic.

 Shell holes.
Of course, the vegetation has grown back, the trees, but they have preserved the trenches.

 Really, the trenches were not that deep.  Nowhere in this trench system are you completely out of sight except for when it becomes a tunnel system.

 Really an eye opening experience.  I am grateful President and I saw the movie "War Horse" just prior to coming on our mission.  If you can visualize this whole area with blasted out trees, dirt mounts, and barbed wire all over the ground and strung everywhere.

Here is a tree in the fore ground and another behind and to the right. They are original tree stumps left from the war.  There were only four or five left to see.  It is nearly 100 years ago that this war took place.  

It was of special interest to President Robinson.  His Grandfather, Charles Christensen, fought in WWI and was a member of the 'Lost Battalion'.  He lived through the war and returned to Kanosh, Utah and to his family.  However, he died later of effects of the war on his health, leaving his wife, Freda, to raise their five children.  Their daughter, Leah Christensen, is President's mother.  President Alden Charles Robinson received his middle name from his Grandfather.

2 comments:

  1. Oh, and you should bring G Leah over to see that? Would she be interested and would she go? It might be neat for her to see. Invite her and her siblings... Pretty cool.

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  2. Interesting to see. My father's cousin, who was in the British Army, was killed at Ieperen 2 Aug 1917, leavng a widow and daughter. He is buried just west of town at Vlamertinghe.

    David Coppin
    (Netherlands Mission 1962-1964)

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