The Significance of Silence

At every League function, no matter how small, members stand in silence for a brief interval to remember departed comrades.

At League clubs around Australia the remembrance silence has become part of the nightly nine o'clock ritual, when any light other than a memorial flame is dimmed, members stand in silence, and then recide the Ode.

A brief silence, usually one or two minutes, characterises many other remembrance ceremonies throughout the British Commonwealth.

The concept of a remembrance silence appears to have originated with an Australian journalist, Edward George Honey, who had served briefly in World War One with an English regiment before being discharged due to ill-health. Honey was born in St Kilda, Melbourne, in 1885 and died of consumption in England 1922.

In 1962, a group of Melbourne citizens formed a committee to obtain recognition for Honey as the man 'who taught the world how to remember'. For many years, a South African politician, Sir Percy Fitzpatrick, had been credited with the idea. The Melbourne committee succeeded in establishing that 'the solemn ceremony of silence now observed in all British countries in remembrance of those who died in war' was first promoted by Edward Honey.

Honey published a letter in the London Evening News on 8 May 1919 under the pen-name of Warren Foster, in which he appealed for a five-minute silence amid all the joymaking planned to celebrate the first anniversary of the end of the War. 'Five little minutes only', he wrote, 'five silent minutes of national remembrance. A very sacred intercession . . . Communion with the Glorious Dead who won us peace, and from the communion new strength, hope and faith in the morrow. Church services, too, if you will, but in the street, the home, the theatre, anywhere, indeed, where Englishmen and their women chance to be, surely in this five minutes of bitter-sweet silence there will be service enough.'

No official action was taken on the idea, however, until, more than five months later, on 27 October 1919, one Lord Milner forwarded a suggestion from his friend, Sir Percy Fitzpatrick, to the King's private secretary, Lord Stamfordham, for a period of silence on Armistice Day, 11 November, in all countries of the British Empire.

Sir Percy wrote, 'When we are gone it may help bring home to those who will come after us, the meaning, the nobility and the unselfishness of the great sacrifice by which their freedom was assured'.

King George V was evidently very moved by the idea and took it up immediately. There is no record that Sir Percy attended a rehearsal for a five-minute silence involving the Grenadier Guards at Buckingham Palace. Five minutes proved too long and the two-minute interval was decided upon.

On 7 November 1919 the King issued a proclamation asking 'that at the hour when the Armistice came into force, the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, there may be for the brief space of two minutes a complete suspension of all our normal activities . . . so that in perfect stillness, the thoughts of everyone may be concentrated on reverent remembrance of the glorious dead'.

The Melbourne committee noted, 'The idea of silence as a token of respect to the dead was not new, of course, for there was silence on the death of King Edward VII . . . and there was silence in Australia for miners killed during the reign of Queen Victoria . . . the originality of Honey's suggestion is based on the fact that this was the first time in history that a victory had been celebrated as a tribute to those who sacrificed their lives and their health to make the victory possible'.

Just how the concept of the remembrance silence was adapted by the League to become an essential feature of the League function, and particulalry the nine o'clock ceremony is not clear. Some members have tried to explain the League's nine o'clock ritual in terms of the nightly nine o'clock ceremony at the Menin Gate in France. An extract from a 1980 edition of The Thirty-niner, published in the Highgate Sub-Branch newsletter in 1981, sought an explanation in the chiming of the bells of Big Ben in London at nine o'clock each evening. According to this report, the practice of silencing BBC radio transmissions while Big Ben chimed nine began in November 1940 'as a propaganda symbol to free men in the captive nations of the world'. Moreover, this account has it that the then chairman of the Big Ben Council which introduced the practice has been influenced by a fellow officer who, in a premonition of his own death in a World War One battle, had asked on behalf of the dead, 'We will help you spiritually . . . Lend us a moment of your time each day and by your silence give us our opportunity, the power of silence is greater than you know.'

Some League members take a more practical view and, in the absence of written records, say the most likely reason for the timing of the nine o'clock service in Australia is that that is when meetings would have finished, giving members time to catch the tram home in the early days, and that the men would have chosen to close their meetings with the remembrance silence. This view holds that a simple coincidence of practicality, and the wish to remember dead mates in the way promulgated by the King gave rise to the Australian ritual.

In any case, the South Australians had developed a nine o'clock service before World War Two and at the League's twenty-first annual Congress in Adelaide in 1936, the National Congress resolved 'that it be a suggestion to State Branches that at all meetings of ex-servicemen a simple ceremony of departed comrades be carried out at 9 p.m. similar to that observed in South Australia'.

The League's National President Gilbert Dyett had introduced the practice of beginning Federal executive meetings with a minute's silence in memory of departed comrades in July 1930.

And similar rituals to the League's nine o'clock ritual has occurred in other countries before 1930. The programme for an ANZAC Day dinner in Durban in South Africa held by the Memorable Order of Tin Hats (MOTHs) in 1929 notes: 'The Toast of "Fallen Comrades" will be placed in darkness and a "Light of Remembrance" lit by the Commander. The MOTH anthem 'Old Soldiers Never Die' will be sung, after which light will be restored.'

The verse from Binyon's poem which became the Ode for the League was being quoted in Australia in association with commemorative services by 1921.

One point made by The Thirty-niner about the simple, moving ritual is indisputable '. . . there is a common bond between each and every other person observing the ceremony no matter how wide the gap between them in other respects'.

In 1948, the League approached the Australian Broadcasting Commission, without success, to have the League Ode broadcast nationally immediately after the nine o'clock time signal on ANZAC Day, Remembrance Day and on other solemn occasions connected with the World Wars One and Two'.