A Moment of Peace: The Christmas truce that united soldiers
The exact death toll of World War I remains uncertain, with historians estimating casualties ranging from 15 to 22 million. Dubbed 'the war to end all wars,' the conflict caused widespread devastation and loss.
It’s hard to pinpoint a moment in the history of humanity where there wasn’t an armed conflict of some sort. Nowadays, from Africa to the Middle East to Eastern Europe, the clarion of war blows, and the bodies fall.
However, in middle of one of the biggest wars known to humankind, soldiers put their weapons aside and celebrated Christmas like brothers.
The year was 1914 and the place was the Western Front of the First World War. Young soldiers from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and many other nationalities had been fighting for several months.
The war that had blazed across Europe was ignited by a bullet shot by Serb anarchist Gavrilo Princip, killing Archduke Franz Ferdinand, crown heir of Austria-Hungary.
The assassination of Franz Ferdinand kickstarted a series of military mobilizations and byzantine alliances that resulted in a military conflict spawning an entire continent.
However, the average soldier fighting for king and country was only dimly aware of all the backroom politics and armchair sabre-rattling that had led to the war. For some, war was an adventure; for others, it was their national duty. Cannon fodder is cannon fodder, all the same.
In the United Kingdom, official propaganda promised young soldiers that they would be back at home for Christmas.
Come Christmastime 1914, instead of enjoying the holidays with their families; they were dealing with frostbite and mud in a trench somewhere in Belgium.
Then, on December 24, a true Christmas miracle happened. Across the Western Front, and disobeying the orders of their commanding officers, guns went silent on either side.
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Instead of the bullets and artillery fire, Christmas carols were sung across the frontline, a reminder of the warmth of home amid the coldness of the battlefield.
Soldiers stepped out of the trenches into No Man’s Land and saw the enemy face to face, only to discover they were just like them.
There was amicable talk, barter and even gifts were exchanged. Makeshift football matches between the German and British soldiers were played out.
Many took advantage of the impromptu ceasefire to fetch the bodies of their fallen brothers in arms.
Not all the trenches in the Western Front joined the festivities, though. And over the Eastern Front there were no such celebrations at all.
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The fight resumed on December 26 and after the Christmas Truce, the military high command on either side made sure no such ceasefires or fraternization with the enemy would occur again.
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For many years later, the story of the Christmas Truce would border on myth. However, for a brief, fleeting moment there was peace.