Miss Sis
One Too Many
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Oh Elaina, I would be lying if I didn't admit that I like the clothes too!
Paratrooper said:Then I ask you why do this then if you see public events as a joke?
I don't mind being the unpaid teacher for a weekend, with what passes for history in most schools what little knowdge I can pass on is a good thing.
Ok I can understand all of that. To each his own.Vladimir Berkov said:I do it to support the units I am in, which sometimes do public events. As I said, public events just don't "do it" for me in terms of why I am in the hobby. I reenact for the living history aspect of it, because not only do I find it enjoyable in its own right but I find I myself learn immensely from it.
Living history and public events just don't mix. You lose the period moment the first time a guy with a fanny pack and Nikes comes up and starts looking all over your stuff.
I don't have anything against reenactors whose primary purpose is public events/educational, but I just think it is wrong to lump these people in with reenactors whose primary purpose is living history, rather than "preserving" it or educating the public.
mikepara said:Being a veteran paratrooper (Parachutist) myself, I find it so annoying when I see people strutting around dressed as if they had just landed in Arnhem or just liberated Port Stanley etc. These reenactors usually portray Generals, Paras, SAS, Commandos, Guards, Pilots or SS never Army Catering Corps or RAF ground crew! so it has nothing to do with living history but everything to do with reflected glory.Collect the stuff, display it but don't wear it.
If these people knew how much they where despised by the veteran community they wouldn't dare leave the house wearing a WW2 uniform. It should be illegal to portray a conflict where there are living participants. So anything WW1 or before well, fair game.
Or is it just veteran Paras that feel this way?