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The Members' Blog

Authorship
Until January 2020, this Blog was the voice of an individual WI member.  Over her 40 years of membership, our Blogger had made a very fine contribution to this and other Federations in England.  With interests in crafts, reading and writing and in travel, she also took an active part in campaigning for women's welfare and education and on environmental issues.  While she has now handed over the Blog to the wider Bucks membership, her archived blog posts are a testament to someone who always made the utmost of her membership, and a rich source of information about the part the WI can play in today's society. 

Westminster Abbey ceremony

8/8/2014

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  August 4th 2014
This is a first for your WI blogger. Having listened to Hilary's enthusiastic account of the ceremony I suggested that she became a visiting writer to the blog to share the experience with you all. Hope you enjoy reading this.
    Report on our visit to Westminster Abbey by Hilary Haworth
It is fair to say that there are generally very few perks to be had when one takes on a role on a WI Federation Sub-Committee, nor even on the Board of Trustees. And that is quite as it should be; these bodies are there to serve the membership, not the other way about. Just occasionally, however, an opportunity comes along that is a real privilege to be part of.
The commemorative service for the centenary of the outbreak of World War One, late in the evening of August 4thwas just such an occasion, Lynn Foster and I were there representing the Buckinghamshire Federation of Women’s Institutes. We did feel slightly outclassed, joining the queue that snaked around the outside of Westminster Abbey just in front of two leaders of the British Sikh community and just behind Harriet Harman, MP. But of course we were there because of the well- recognized importance of the WI as a key part of the social fabric of Britain, then and now, not on our own merits!.

Once past security, there was a real sense of vigil from the very beginning. We were spared the voice- overs and interviews which the BBC feels obliged to conduct over the organ music at such occasions as we filed in through the Great West Door, past the stunning floral border to the grave of the Unknown Soldier, and on to our seats.

After we had all lit our candles and once all the great and the good had processed in, there was a true silence inside the Abbey; only the hum of a helicopter outside served to remind us not only of the intensity of the security operation in progress, but also how changed is our world from that of 1914 when planes were called upon to defend us which appear impossibly flimsy today. The organist played an improvisation on the harmonies of the hymn tune Aberystwyth very softly as the Duchess of Cornwall, arrived which led wondrously well into the only congregational hymn of the evening Jesu, Lover of my soul.

The music throughout the service was particularly well chosen. I shall never forget the sense I had of ‘inhabiting’ the sound of Vaughan Williams’ Kyrie, as its tendrils were sent coiling around the Abbey by a choir utterly in command of its repertoire, its ensemble and its acoustic space. Another sound that will stay with me is the very human ‘last breath’ sigh of a hundred or so candles being blown out at once around me.

Unafraid of choosing European composers as well as British, the designers of this commemoration were also courageous to choose not only the more ‘obvious’ readings and reflections. It acknowledged that not all perspectives on the war accord with those we are used to hearing in the voices of the major poets of the time; we are befuddled, now, by the foolhardiness in the Rose Macauley poem read by Dame Penelope Keith, or the buoyancy in a letter home from a soldier just off to the front - but both of these would have been genuinely felt and made perfect sense at the time.

The final silence, in as much gloom as TV cameras can tolerate, was also perfectly solemnly observed. We were treated to a final and magisterial bit of Bach (the C minor prelude and fugue BWV 546) from the organist before spilling out into a darkened Parliament Square with our now strangely misshapen candles.

Rushing for the last train, Lynn and I only had a few seconds to chat to Diana Birch and our other friends from National who we met on the way out, and we probably paid the light tower Spectra less attention than it deserved.

It was an honour to attend this ceremony on behalf of the WI, and an occasion I shall have cause to remember for many years to come. I am really grateful for yet another wonderful experience that would never have come my way if I had not become so involved with the WI.







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  • Home
  • What we do
    • Board and Committees
      • Federation Trustees
      • Committees
      • Can you help?
    • Campaigns
      • End Violence against Women
      • Get On Board
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      • 5 Minutes that matter
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    • Denman Online
    • The Members' Blog
  • What's On
    • Events Calendar
    • Competitions & Challenges
      • 100 Miles More
      • Huxley Cup
      • Elizabeth Bell Challenge 2021
      • 101 words
      • Silver Cup
      • Lady Denman Cup
      • Virtual Show
    • Centenary+1 Celebrations
  • Join Us
    • About Bucks WIs
    • Find a WI (Map)
      • Morning WIs
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    • Find a WI (A-Z)
  • On-line Store
  • Contact Us
  • Gallery
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    • Tutorials & Library
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    • Volunteering with BFWI
  • History of Buckinghamshire WIs
  • Use of Website
  • Covid advice