Britain still at war over legacy of World War I

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

photo This is 2007 file photo, British actor and TV Presenter Tony Robinson speaks to the media during the launch of the online facility for the British Army's WWI service records at the Cabinet War Room in London. Around the world, this year's centenary of the start of World War I is an occasion for commemoration.
photo A memorial to commemorate local soldiers and civilians who were killed in World War One stands in front of the church of Wulvergem, Belgium on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2013. The churchyard contains 38 World War One Commonwealth graves. Wulvergem, like many other towns in the West Flanders, are preparing for four years of visitors for the upcoming World War One Centenary.

LONDON - Around the world, the 2014 centenary of the start of World War I is an occasion for commemoration.

Yet in Britain, where the trenches of Flanders remain an ideological battlefield, it has also sparked an argument -- about patriotism, historical responsibility and the place of humor in teaching history.

Only in Britain, perhaps, would the spat pit the Conservative-led government's education minister against a comic actor -- Tony Robinson, who played the dim-witted soldier Baldrick in "Blackadder Goes Forth," a much-loved television sitcom about the war.

In an article for the right-of-center Daily Mail newspaper, Education Secretary Michael Gove said "Blackadder" and other satires had created a public impression of the four-year war -- in which more than 8 million troops and millions of civilians died -- as "a misbegotten shambles -- a series of catastrophic mistakes perpetrated by an out-of-touch elite."

In four seasons of "Blackadder," comic actor Rowan Atkinson -- now world-famous as Mr. Bean -- played a world-weary nobleman in different eras of British history, suffering the never-ending idiocy of each period's ruling elites.

In the final season, "Blackadder Goes Forth," he and dim servant Baldrick, played by Robinson, are soldiers in the trenches of World War I under the command of a clueless general (Stephen Fry) in what is depicted as a futile conflict.

"Millions have died, but our troops have advanced no further than an asthmatic ant with some heavy shopping," Blackadder says.

First broadcast in 1989, it's regarded by many as a classic -- partly because of the poignant final scene, in which the jokes stop and the main characters charge into battle and to their likely deaths.

Yet Gove, the minister, is not among its fans. In his article, he cited the show as a contributor to "misrepresentations which reflect ... an unhappy compulsion on the part of some to denigrate virtues such as patriotism, honor and courage."

He said for Britain, World War I was "plainly a 'just' war" and one country was to blame for starting it -- Germany, with its "aggressively expansionist war aims and ... scorn for the international order."

Gove's remarks were criticized by Robinson, a well-known activist for the opposition Labour Party.

"I think Mr. Gove has just made a very silly mistake," Robinson told Sky News, in saying that "Blackadder" formed children's views of the war.

He said teachers used the show simply as "another teaching tool" alongside visits to battlefields and reading war poetry.

Labour's education spokesman, Tristram Hunt, accused Gove of a "crass" attempt to hijack "what should be a moment for national reflection and respectful debate."

The furor is evidence of how large World War I -- in which a million British soldiers died -- still looms in the country's imagination.

Generations of British schoolchildren have studied the wrenching front-line poems of Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon, and the conflict has inspired countless books, plays and movies.

Britain plans major commemorations of the war this year, from ceremonies and stage productions to the restoration of war memorials and a soccer tournament to commemorate the Christmas 1914 truce between German and British troops at the front.

Historians remain divided about who should bear the burden of responsibility for the war. It was triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne, which sparked a series of events that drove two powerful blocs into conflict: Britain, France and Russia on one side; Germany and Austria-Hungary on the other. The first global war drew in more countries, including Britain's colonies around the world and, in 1917, the United States.

British historian Max Hastings, whose recent book "Catastrophe" recounts the opening months of the war, told The Associated Press by email Tuesday that Gove was right to claim that Germany was chiefly to blame. He said Britain "had no choice but to fight ... because German hegemony on the continent would have been an intolerable outcome for freedom and democracy."

But Cambridge University history professor Richard J. Evans disagreed, saying "it wasn't that simple."

He accused Gove and other conservative politicians of using the war's anniversary for modern political ends, to advance "a kind of Euroskeptic agenda -- the idea that bashing the Hun is a good thing to do."

"You have to be a bit more nuanced after 100 years and not just parrot British propaganda about the war," Evans said. "It's possible to say that extremely brave men were fighting courageously for a cause that in the end turned out to be a futile one."

He added that politicians should recognize "there are many different views of the First World War and there are many different ways you can commemorate it."