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11/11 Day: Remembrance & Armistice

11/11 Day: Remembrance & Armistice

Date:

The Great War promised an end to war, 20 years later a second war. A century later, sirens and sales compete with silence. What, exactly, are we remembering?

3 Narratives News | November 11, 2025

Intro (my side of the story): I grew up believing Remembrance Day would keep us honest. The eleventh hour, the poppy, the silence. My father lived in Italy during the Second World War; later he would be a Naval Captain shot in the head and survived, he fought and lived until 90 years old. His lesson was simple: work for peace. Yet here we are, with the language of conflict becoming casual again. In China, 11/11 is dominated by shopping festivals. In Washington, the “Department of Defense” is now called the “Department of War.” Reuters, Financial Times. The Armistice once promised a break from madness; today the arguments feel loud enough to drown the silence.

Context: The silence, the numbers, the drift

At 11:00 on the eleventh day of the eleventh month, we pause because hostilities in the First World War ceased at that exact moment on November 11, 1918. The two-minute silence became part of Armistice/Remembrance observances from 1919 onward and is now embedded across the Commonwealth. Veterans Affairs Canada, CWGC, Open University.

The World Wars were not comparable in toll: estimates put WWI deaths around 15–20 million and WWII at roughly 70–85 million. Britannica (WWI), Britannica (WWII). Meanwhile, November 11 in China has morphed into the world’s biggest shopping event ‘Singles’ Day, now a commercial season peaking on 11/11. Reuters explainer.

Across this distance, between bugles and checkouts, do we still try to answer an old question: What is a soldier for?

Narrative One: The Soldier as a Fighter for Peace

Inside this worldview, the soldier’s purpose is paradoxical: to confront violence so that others can live without it. The veterans who say it plain are the ones who’ve seen the worst. Dwight D. Eisenhower put it this way:

“I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can; as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.”

Eisenhower Presidential Library. William Tecumseh Sherman, speaking to cadets long after his campaigns, didn’t decorate the truth: “War is hell.” DPLA / Michigan Military Academy, 1879.

The rituals of remembrance and the two minutes of silence, Last Post, the names carved in stone, are not nostalgia. They are instructions. If we insist that every use of force be justified in public, if we count the costs in lives and not only in budgets, then the uniform becomes a civic trust, not a license. Remembrance Day is less a military holiday than a civilian discipline: to be worthy of the men and women we send, we must debate peace as seriously as we fund war.

Even the phrase we whisper

“lest we forget”

is a warning borrowed from literature, not a boast. Rudyard Kipling repeated it like a drumbeat in Recessional (1897). Poetry Foundation. Memory is not automatic; it is a practice. So is restraint.

Narrative Two: The Soldier as an Instrument of a Violent Species

From this vantage, war is not an aberration but a recurring human behavior. States compete; resources are finite; technology extends the fist. The most honest veterans, in this view, are the ones who tore off the veil. Two-time Medal of Honor recipient Smedley Butler called it “a racket”, a blunt critique of interests and profits that can gather behind flags. Butler, War Is a Racket (1935). Philosopher George Santayana wrote: “Only the dead have seen the end of war.” Soliloquies in England, 1922.

In this telling, remembrance is necessary, but it does not civilize our species; it only keeps the bookkeeping honest. The very fact that a modern capital can argue about renaming its defense bureaucracy back to “War” suggests that language tends to follow power, not ethics. Reuters. Singles’ Day’s rise on 11/11, in this view, is not a moral failure but a mirror: commerce rushes into every silence unless we guard it.

The Silent Story: Two Minutes That Still Belong to Us

Strip away slogans, and the silence remains. It is stubborn, unmarketable, and still ours. For two minutes each year—born in 1919, kept alive by veterans’ halls and school assemblies—we rehearse a harder skill than outrage. DND/CAF history, Royal Canadian Legion, IWM. We remember the cost in human beings—nurses, sappers, pilots, cooks, parents and children and friends—and we try to carry that memory back into policy, into journalism, into daily speech.

My father’s lesson was not complicated. He fought, and he came home, and he told us to work for peace. Whether you believe the soldier’s purpose is to end war or to win the next one, the two minutes at 11:00 are a chance to meet in the middle and say the names.

Related at 3N: Our Categories Hub and a recent analysis on U.S.–Canada tensions.


Key Takeaways

  • Remembrance Day’s two-minute silence at 11:00 traces to Armistice 1918 and early Commonwealth observances in 1919; it survives because citizens keep it. CWGC
  • WWII’s toll was vastly higher than WWI (≈70–85M vs. ≈15–20M deaths). Naming the cost accurately is part of remembrance. Britannica
  • Narrative 1: Soldiers hate war precisely because they know it; remembrance is a discipline toward peace (Eisenhower; Sherman).
  • Narrative 2: War recurs; interests align; memory alone won’t stop it (Butler; Santayana).
  • On 11/11, commerce and ceremony collide (Singles’ Day). The two minutes are the part still under our control. Reuters

Questions This Article Answers

  • Why is Remembrance observed at the eleventh hour on November 11? (Because the WWI ceasefire took effect then.) Source
  • Where did the two-minute silence come from, and why two minutes? Source
  • How many people died in the World Wars, broadly speaking? WWI WWII
  • What have notable soldiers said about war and peace? (Eisenhower, Sherman, Butler.) Ike Sherman Butler
  • Why is 11/11 also associated with shopping in China? (Singles’ Day’s evolution.) Source

Cover image

Art direction: 1200×675, cinematic magazine look. Left third: a bugler’s silhouette at a cenotaph in cool blue dusk. Right third: a city street where shoppers pass a glowing 11/11 window. Center: a person holding a red poppy. Alt text: “A poppy held at a cenotaph as city shoppers pass an 11/11 display.”

Carlos Taylhardat
Carlos Taylhardathttps://3narratives.com/author-carlos-taylhardat/
Carlos Taylhardat, publisher of 3 Narratives News, writes about global politics, technology, and culture through a dual-narrative lens. With over twenty years in communications and visual media, he advocates for transparent, balanced journalism that helps readers make informed decisions. Carlos comes from a family with a long tradition in journalism and diplomacy; his father, Carlos Alberto Taylhardat , was a Venezuelan journalist and diplomat recognized for his international work. This heritage, combined with his own professional background, informs the mission of 3 Narratives News: Two Sides. One Story. You Make the Third. For inquiries, he can be reached at [email protected] .

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