Remembrance Day: Why we must continue to mark the horror and sacrifice of the First World War – Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP

Members of a British Highland regiment in a trench during the First World War in 1915. (Picture: Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)Members of a British Highland regiment in a trench during the First World War in 1915. (Picture: Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Members of a British Highland regiment in a trench during the First World War in 1915. (Picture: Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Every year in France and Belgium, farmers ploughing their fields unearth shell casings, barbed wire and shrapnel.

It is the material of a war fought over 100 years ago and it is called “the Iron Harvest”. While that war has passed out of living memory, that harvest will continue. It is a poignant reminder that whilst those who lived through it are no longer with us, the scars of that conflict run deep into the land and we have a duty to remember.

My first speech in the Scottish Parliament as a newly elected MSP in 2016 fell on a particular anniversary for my family. On that day, 100 years previously, my great uncle, a 23-year-old private among the 1st Canadian Mounted Rifles out of Saskatchewan was killed along with 80 per cent of his battalion on the first day of the battle of Mont Sorel on the Ypres Salient in Belgium. His name was Alexander Bennet and I am named for him.

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