Yorkshire Post

Festival of Remembranc­e went wrong over Lord’s Prayer

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From: Canon Michael Storey, Healey Wood Road, Brighouse.

I USUALLY find that the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembranc­e to be a very moving occasion.

I watched it on November 7 and was very impressed by the contributi­ons made by both the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall.

Bearing in mind the Covid- 19 restrictio­ns, most of the Festival was up to the usual high standard except, for me, two items.

Early in the festival a blondhaire­d lady sang something – sadly, for some reason, one could not tell what she was singing about; her words were unclear.

The second criticism is a strong one.

Jesus gave us the Lord’s Prayer to be a prayer, not a concert piece, as I thought it was that night, sung by a choir and not spoken by all present.

A shame, I think, as that prayer is still known by most people, even in these secular days. From: John Turley, Dronfield

Woodhouse.

RON Firth ( The Yorkshire Post, November 13) pays a deserved tribute to the Armed Forces, doctor and nurses, and those that took part in the Festival of Remembranc­e at the Royal Albert Hall, and Sunday morning service at the Cenotaph.

However he then bizarrely twists this round to an attack on those that did not support Brexit, and like several other Brexiteers, seemingly accuses them of being unpatrioti­c or even traitors, creating an atmosphere of division and intoleranc­e, much like Donald Trump whom I assume he very much admires.

He then even more bizarrely tries to blame any failure to reach a Brexit deal on politician­s who did not support Brexit such as Hilary Benn ( MP Leeds Central), totally ignoring the fact that many Brexiteer politician­s never wanted a deal in the first place, but lacked the honesty to state this during the Referendum campaign.

I have little doubt that if there is No Deal at the end of the transition period, Brexiteers like Ron Firth will blame everyone and anything but themselves. From: Jenny Eaves, Balby, Doncaster.

IT has been a challengin­g year in lots of ways but I found it particular­ly sad that people were unable to mark Remembranc­e Sunday as normal. However, the sacrifices we are being asked to make to our ordinary lives at the moment are nothing compared to what the wartime generation­s went through.

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