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The Legion encourages the wearing of Poppies at funerals of Veterans, and for any commemorative event such as a memorial service, or the anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge. As well, it is not inappropriate to wear a Poppy during other times to commemorate Fallen Veterans and it is an individual choice to do so.

Poppies may be worn throughout the Remembrance period, including in the evening after Remembrance Day Ceremony. Some choose to remove their Poppy at the end of the day on November Support RBL as we mark years of the Poppy Appeal, by distributing poppies to your friends and family to ensure we can continue to support our Armed Forces community.

RBL is a national network that is there to support members of the Armed Forces. From helping veterans and families in emergency situations to rehabilitation. Stories How do you wear your poppy? Poppy Appeal. The best way to wear a poppy is simply with pride. The most common poppies we see during the months of November is the red poppy sold by the Royal British Legion.

The Poppy Appeal by the Royal British Legion raises funds to support serving and ex-serving members of the armed forces and their families. You can buy a red poppy from a local Poppy Appeal collector, or you can purchase them online, including from Amazon. The red poppy might be the most popular, but you can find poppies of different colours to help you express your remembrance in the way you would like. Remembrance Day: UK pays respects with two minutes silence.

Others argue that the symbol should be displayed on the left by men and the right by women, the traditional positions of a badge or brooch. Its opening lines refer to how the flowers grew from the graves of soldiers across Western Europe during the conflict:.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row. As the war ended, American poet Moina Michael used In Flanders Fields as the inspiration for her own work, We Shall Keep the Faith , and began wearing and distributing the red poppy as a symbol of remembrance.

The practice quickly spread to the UK, where the first ever Poppy Day was held on 11 November, , the third anniversary of Armistice Day. It was adopted as a symbol by the newly-formed Royal British Legion, a charity established to provide support for members and veterans of the British Armed Forces and their families.



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