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Posts Tagged ‘Christmas Truce’

Film shot in Michigan about World War 1 Christmas truce to premiere in Bay City – mlive.com

Posted by M. C. on December 27, 2019

I wish us all luck in being able to view this.

https://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw-bay-city/2019/12/film-shot-in-michigan-about-world-war-1-christmas-truce-to-premiere-in-bay-city.html

By

BAY CITY, MI – While movies with Santa Claus and snowmen are popular this time of year, a film shot in mid-Michigan is offering a different type of holiday movie experience.

A history based film titled “The Peace Pox” premieres Dec. 22 in Bay City. It chronicles the Christmas Truce of 1914, when World War 1 soldiers on both sides temporarily stopped fighting.

“It’s the story of how the common soldiers come together at Christmas Eve and have a moment of peace to bury the dead,” Director Danzell Calhoun said.

The film was spearheaded by a local crew and was shot locally. Calhoun and producer and writer Rodney Merten led the project.

The film premieres at 2 p.m. Dec. 22 at Bay City’s Westown Theater, 611 E. Midland St. Tickets are available in advance for $10 by contacting dc@resilientmediagroup.com or 989-372-2858 or at the door for $12.

The film takes a look at the lives of two sergeants, one German and one British. The characters reflect back on their lives and realize that they have a common connection.

“That aspect of going from enemies to friends, I took it from more of an everyday standpoint that the normal person can relate to,” said Calhoun.

“The Peace Pox” was filmed in Fairgrove, Bay City, and other Michigan locations. Filming sites included Hyatt Ewald Funeral Home in Bay City and First Presbyterian Church of Saginaw.

Calhoun and his crew had to do a lot of research and they received a lot of tips and pointers from the dedicated reenactors who joined them for the film. The weather also served as a realistic teacher about World War I and the conditions soldiers endured.

Calhoun and the crew were out in below zero temperatures for multiple 12-hour days filming. They were working in freezing cold actual trenches that filled with water, just like the trenches from World War I, requiring the crew to work through tough conditions.

Calhoun and Merten are no strangers to film production. The two started working together in 2007 when they began doing stage plays in local bars and gymnasiums. They then produced their first feature film called, “Torn Soul”.

The duo has also led their own film festivals, with Mertin directing the Tarpon Arts Film Festival and Calhoun the Great Lakes State Film Festival. Both are in the business of also acquiring and distributing films.

Producers for “The Peace Pox” include Rebecca Calhoun and John Peterson. Steve Norton was the assistant director.

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?u=http4.bp.blogspot.com-6UGwz_KK1pwTvZPt8MsPUIAAAAAAAABbwrB9yACnOZqss1600christmastruce2.jpg&f=1&nofb=1

 

 

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The Christmas Truce of 1914 – Why There Is Still No Peace On Earth – Antiwar.com Original

Posted by M. C. on December 26, 2019

https://original.antiwar.com/David_Stockman/2019/12/24/the-christmas-truce-of-1914-why-there-is-still-no-peace-on-earth/

After the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989 and the death of the Soviet Union was confirmed two years later when Boris Yeltsin courageously stood down the Red Army tanks in front of Moscow’s White House, a dark era in human history came to an end.

The world had descended into a 77-Year War, incepting with the mobilization of the armies of old Europe in August 1914. If you want to count bodies, 150 million were killed by all the depredations that germinated in the Great War, its foolish aftermath at Versailles, and the march of history into World War II and the Cold War that followed inexorably thereupon.

Upwards of 8% of the human race was wiped out during that span. The toll encompassed the madness of trench warfare during 1914-1918; the murderous regimes of Soviet and Nazi totalitarianism that rose from the ashes of the Great War and Versailles; and then the carnage of WWII and all the lesser (unnecessary) wars and invasions of the Cold War including Korea and Vietnam.

At the end of the Cold War, therefore, the last embers of the fiery madness that had incepted with the guns of August 1914 had finally burned out. Peace was at hand. Yet 28 years later there is still no peace because Imperial Washington confounds it.

In fact, the War Party entrenched in the nation’s capital is dedicated to economic interests and ideological perversions that guarantee perpetual war. These forces ensure endless waste on armaments; they cause the inestimable death and human suffering that stems from 21st-century high-tech warfare; and they inherently generate terrorist blowback from those upon whom the War Party inflicts its violent hegemony.

Worse still, Washington’s great war machine and teeming national security industry is its own agent of self-perpetuation. When it is not invading, occupying and regime changing, its vast apparatus of internal policy bureaus and outside contractors, lobbies, think tanks and NGOs is busy generating reasons for new imperial ventures.

So there was a virulent threat to peace still lurking on the Potomac after the 77-Year War ended. The great general and President, Dwight Eisenhower, had called it the “military-industrial complex” in his farewell address. But that memorable phrase had been abbreviated by his speechwriters, who deleted the word “congressional” in a gesture of comity to the legislative branch.

So restore Ike’s deleted reference to the pork barrels and Sunday-afternoon warriors of Capitol Hill and toss in the legions of Beltway busybodies who constituted the civilian branches of the Cold War armada (CIA, State, AID, NED and the rest) and the circle would have been complete. It constituted the most awesome machine of warfare and imperial hegemony since the Roman legions bestrode most of the civilized world.

In a word, the real threat to peace circa 1991 was that the American Imperium would not go away quietly into the good night.

In fact, during the past 28 years Imperial Washington has lost all memory that peace was ever possible at the end of the Cold War. Today it is as feckless, misguided and bloodthirsty as were Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, Vienna and London in August 1914.

A few months after that horrendous slaughter had been unleashed 105 years ago, however, soldiers along the western front broke into spontaneous truces of Christmas celebration, song and even exchange of gifts. For a brief moment they wondered why they were juxtaposed in lethal combat along the jaws of hell.

As Will Griggs once described it,

A sudden cold snap had left the battlefield frozen, which was actually a relief for troops wallowing in sodden mire. Along the Front, troops extracted themselves from their trenches and dugouts, approaching each other warily, and then eagerly, across No Man’s Land. Greetings and handshakes were exchanged, as were gifts scavenged from care packages sent from home. German souvenirs that ordinarily would have been obtained only through bloodshed – such as spiked pickelhaube helmets, or Gott mit uns belt buckles – were bartered for similar British trinkets. Carols were sung in German, English, and French. A few photographs were taken of British and German officers standing alongside each other, unarmed, in No Man’s Land.

Near the Ypres salient, Germans and Scotsmen chased after wild hares that, once caught, served as an unexpected Christmas feast. Perhaps the sudden exertion of chasing wild hares prompted some of the soldiers to think of having a football match. Then again, little prompting would have been necessary to inspire young, competitive men – many of whom were English youth recruited off soccer fields – to stage a match. In any case, numerous accounts in letters and journals attest to the fact that on Christmas 1914, German and English soldiers played soccer on the frozen turf of No Man’s Land.

British Field Artillery Lieutenant John Wedderburn-Maxwell described the event as “probably the most extraordinary event of the whole war – a soldier’s truce without any higher sanction by officers and generals….”

The truth is, there was no good reason for the Great War. The world had stumbled into war based on false narratives and the institutional imperatives of military mobilization plans, alliances and treaties arrayed into a doomsday machine and petty short-term diplomatic maneuvers and political calculus. Yet it took more than three-quarters of a century for all the consequential impacts and evils to be purged from the life of the planet.

The peace that was lost last time has not been regained this time, however, and for the same reasons. Historians can readily name the culprits from 105 years ago.

These include the German general staff’s plan for a lightning mobilization and strike on the western front called the Schlieffen Plan; the incompetence and intrigue in the court at St. Petersburg; French President Poincare’s anti-German irredentism owing to the 1871 loss of his home province, Alsace-Lorraine; and the bloodthirsty cabal around Winston Churchill who forced England into an unnecessary war, among countless others.

Since these casus belli of 1914 were criminally trivial in light of all that metastasized thereafter, it might do well to name the institutions and false narratives that block the return of peace today. The fact is, these impediments are even more contemptible than the forces that crushed the Christmas truces one century ago.

IMPERIAL WASHINGTON – THE NEW GLOBAL MENACE

The rest here

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The Christmas Truce | Jacobin

 

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Remembering the Christmas Truce of 1914 – LewRockwell

Posted by M. C. on December 24, 2018

The Christmas Truce of 1914 was a spontaneous event that happened at a number of locations all along the 600 miles of triple trenches that stretched across Belgium and France, and it was an event that would never again be duplicated, thanks to the war-profiteers, professional militarists and saber-rattling journalists in the media, Christian Bishops and Members of Parliament who glory in their nation’s “pseudo-patriotic” wars.

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2018/12/gary-g-kohls/remembering-the-christmas-truce-of-1914-questioning-christian-participation-in-war/

By Kohl’s

An earlier version of this article was posted at The Greanville Post.

“…and the ones who call the shots won’t be among the dead and lame;
And on each end of the rifle we’re the same”– John McCutcheon

104 years ago something happened in the fifth month of the “War to End All Wars” that put a tiny little blip of hope – which was cruelly and rapidly extinguished by the pro-militarism powers-that-be in both church and state – in the historical timeline of the organized mass slaughter that is war.

The event was regarded by the professional military officer class to be so profound and so disturbing that strategies were immediately put in place that would ensure that such an event could never happen again…

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crucifixion

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The Christmas Truce of World War I – Foundation for Economic Education – Working for a free and prosperous world

Posted by M. C. on December 26, 2017

More about what we need more of.

https://fee.org/articles/the-christmas-truce-of-world-war-i/

[Christmas_Truce_5.jpg]
But there were souls on each side of that fratricidal conflict determined to preserve the decencies of Christendom, even amid the conflict. As Christmas dawned,
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