SHARE Magazine October 2016 | Página 6

P Peace is a word we read about especially at Christmas time, on Christmas cards. We associate a dove with peace which again is usually on greetings cards. We also hear of many stories about war and peace, including this one below which seems to be one of the most popular: Momentary Peace “The Christmas Truce of 1914 is often celebrated as a symbolic moment of peace in an otherwise devastatingly violent war. We may like to believe that for just one day, all across the front, men from both 6 | SHARE|MAGAZINE sides emerged from the trenches and met in No Man’s Land to exchange gifts and play football. But first-hand testimonies help us get closer to what really happened. Along the Western Front, a scattered series of small-scale ceasefires did happen between some German and British forces. But this brief festive reprieve was far from a mass event. Where it didn’t occur, 25 December 1914 was a day of war like any other. Where it did, accounts suggest that men sang carols and in some cases left their trenches and met in No Man’s Land. However, the October - December 2016 motivations for such events were complex – practical as much as ‘magical’ – and this wasn’t the first unofficial truce to take place. Instead, it was to be one of the last.” ...Dan Snow Broadcaster & Historian But what does peace mean as defined by the dictionary? It means - Freedom from disturbance; quiet and tranquillity, calm, restfulness, law and order. When we come to the Bible and see the word peace what does it mean then? We seem to have come to accept the former without exploring the latter.