Queen pays Christmas poppy tribute

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 Desember 2014 | 19.21

25 December 2014 Last updated at 11:38
Queen Elizabeth II

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The Queen's message was recorded earlier this month at Buckingham Palace

The Queen's Christmas Day message will highlight the ceramic poppy tribute to World War One casualties and people dealing with the Ebola disease.

The hugely popular poppy installation at the Tower of London was "a reminder of the grief of loved ones left behind", she will say.

And she will reveal how she has been "deeply touched" by those who have treated victims of Ebola in Africa.

The message will be broadcast on both television and radio at 15:00 GMT.

It was recorded earlier this month at Buckingham Palace.

Members of the Royal Family have left St Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham, after the traditional family Christmas Day service.

Well-wishers caught a glimpse of the Queen and her family as they made their way to the church - although neither the Duchess of Cornwall nor Prince George were there.

A Clarence House spokeswoman said: "The duchess put her back out earlier in December and has been in pain and is receiving physiotherapy. The doctors have advised against any travel."

Prince George is likely to have spent the morning in the care of his nanny.

WWI memorabilia

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh visited the poppy installation, called Blood Swept Lands And Seas Of Red, in October.

The 888,246 ceramic poppies represented each British and Colonial death and the display was dismantled after Armistice Day.

The Queen will say: "The ceramic poppies at the Tower of London drew millions, and the only possible reaction to walking among them was silence.

"For every poppy, a life; and a reminder of the grief of loved ones left behind."

Her Majesty recorded her Christmas message while sitting next to a table featuring separate photographs of her grandparents George V and Queen Mary and an embossed brass box.

The box was a Christmas Day gift for those serving overseas in World War One during 1914.

Organised by the Sailors and Soldiers Christmas Fund created by Princess Mary, King George's daughter, it was filled with gifts such as tobacco for smokers to chocolate for nurses.

Also in her speech, the Queen will acknowledge the UK's contribution of aid and expertise in the fight against the deadly Ebola disease in several West African nations this year.

She will say: "I have been deeply touched this year by the selflessness of aid workers and medical volunteers who have gone abroad to help victims of conflict or of diseases like Ebola, often at great personal risk."

'Debt of gratitude'

Her Majesty's Christmas address is written by the Queen herself and is one of the few occasions that she expresses her own views with no government involvement.

Typically it contains a strong religious framework, reflects current issues and draws on her own experiences over the year.

This year's message was produced by the BBC and will be shown in Commonwealth countries around the world.

The message will be available on the Royal Channel on YouTube after it has been transmitted.

Meanwhile, Her Majesty has also delivered a Christmas message in a letter to an armed forces charity to acknowledge the "great debt of gratitude" owed to the nation's military.

Writing to ABF The Soldiers' Charity, of which she is patron, the Queen paid tribute to those "who put their lives in jeopardy to keep us safe".


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