It brings me to this small excerpt of a WW1 poem by Lt. Alan Seeger -
Merry Christmas to all fellow Freepers
Agreed, however, sometimes disputes are settled only by war - or at the least, an opposition resulting in the need to fight!
Think this is on the History Channel right now.
BTTT
So the "Snoopy's Christmas" song by the Royal Guardsman is rooted in truth!
Back when Europeans were Christian. They're so over that, now.
My granddad was in WWI. He was commissioned in the Engineers, never saw combat. So was our next door neighbor when we first married. He was infantry and was gassed in the Argonne Forest. It crippled him for the rest of his life - he died of emphysema and lung cancer.
A sad retelling of the tale of the Christmas Truce:
There was a Christmas bombing truce early in World War II, too, apparently initiated by the Germans. There is a good if somewhat vague reference to Christmas truces in the movie "A Midnight Clear," a fine WW II movie.
...
... This kind of battle was invented by Lewis Carroll and Jules Verne and whoever wrote Undine, and country deacons bowling and marraines in Marseilles and girls seduced in the back lanes of Wurtemburg and Westphalia. Why, this was a love battlethere was a century of middle-class love spent here. This was the last love battle.
-- F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender is the Night
The British and German soldiers came from quite similar backgrounds, and there was no quarrel between them. They'd gone to war because their countries had a very distant and abstract disagreement, not an ancestral or passionate hatred. And the two peoples had much respect for each other.
Thus, when British and German were thrown against each other there was an impulse to come together, if at all possible. This was probably weaker and fraternization less common where the Germans faced the French or the Russians, for feelings were more embittered between those countries.
Coming together across the lines at Christmas was certainly amazing, but it simply highights how ghastly the rest of the war was. In most wars, animosities can be used to justify the killing, and indeed, both sides tried to stir up war feeling to the highest possible degree. But perhaps, where such feelings really don't exist the killing and the waste look even worse, if possible, than they otherwise would be though.
"Yes; quaint and curious war is!
You shoot a fellow down
You'd treat if met where any bar is,
Or help to half-a-crown."
Thomas Hardy, "The Man He Killed"