Flanders, the northern region of Belgium, is promoting the 100th
anniversary of the Great War at World Travel Market 2012, with the aim of
attracting up to two million tourists in four years.
The In Flanders Fields Museum in Ypres is
being re-launched in June this year commemorating the dead and the 20 million
wounded; following a three year rebuild which has doubled it in size.
The museum also charts the history of the fields where poppies, now a symbol of
peace and remembrance, abound and focuses on both the impact of the Great War
as well as the impact it had on millions of people's lives.
Tourism Flanders Project Leader of the Great War Centenary Veerle Viaene said:
“Even if you are not a descendant of someone who fought here in Flanders the area is still very moving for anyone who
visits it and visitors are fascinated by it.
“We want to tell the story on and behind the front; there are so many different
stories of all the soldiers who had to fight and survive in the war and their
women and children who stayed at home. “We also want to look at the different
ways it affected those fighting in the war, not just the historical and
military impact but the way it affected their mental health too.
“We are also looking at the families who lived in the region before the war
started and what they had to do to survive. We want to tell the little stories
of people and the effect the fighting had on them too.” Viaene added the recent
film War Horse has once again raised interest in World War I, a situation which
will be further heightened by HBO and the BBC's forthcoming autumn drama
Parade's End which is also partially set during the war.
Viaene hopes the 100th anniversary of the Great War will see two million
tourists visit the Flanders Fields region during the four-year period,
considerably increasing the 350,000 visitors to the area each year at the
moment. Overall, Flanders is aiming to attract
an extra one million tourists to the region in 2015, taking the total to seven
million people.
She added tourists are expected from as far afield as Australia and New
Zealand, countries which were caught up in the fighting
due to their relationship with the UK, as well as German, French,
British and other European travellers.
Reed Travel Exhibitions Director World Travel Market Simon Press said: “Such
anniversaries can really drive a destination's tourism and with World War I
still very much part of the public's consciousness, it is an opportunity worth
grasping. “I am sure WTM will provide an excellent forum for pushing this
message and starting the process of educating the trade to ensure its success.”
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