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England - London - Spanish flag and pavement memorial

A memorial has been placed where a young Spanish schoolboy boy called 'Diego' died at Seven Dials, Covent Garden, London, England, UK. If we drove past this place where someone's life ended, the victim would just be an anonymous statistic but flowers are left to die too and touching poems and dedications are written by family and loved-ones. One reads: "?Diego our friend, we are sorry you had to die like this.? ?School will never be the same without you.? From a project about makeshift shrines: ?Britons have long installed memorials in the landscape: Statues and monuments to war heroes, Princesses and the socially privileged. But nowadays we lay wreaths to those who die suddenly - ordinary folk killed as pedestrians, as drivers or by alcohol, all celebrated on our roadsides and in cities with simple, haunting roadside remberences.

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memorials011-10-05_2000.jpg
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© Richard Baker. No copying, screen grabbing, transmission or publication without permission.
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atheism memorial shrine death macabre memory family social gesture commemorate place location remembrance token remember public tragedy grief mourning agnostic scene landscape intimate sudden loss culture practice habit tradition floral tribute mortality final loved-one respects bereavement fatality casualty offerings reminder statistics anonymous spiritual expression marker context victim makeshift left emotional sadness sad urban city capital GB British English Europe EU Great Britain England UK London flowers roadside Spanish hug holding Seven Dials Covent Garden street signatures love sorrow killed murder homicide bouquets fate tragic violence crime young
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Roadside Memorials
A memorial has been placed where a young Spanish schoolboy boy called 'Diego' died at Seven Dials, Covent Garden, London, England, UK. If we drove past this place where someone's life ended, the victim would just be an anonymous statistic but flowers are left to die too and touching poems and dedications are written by family and loved-ones. One reads: "?Diego our friend, we are sorry you had to die like this.? ?School will never be the same without you.? From a project about makeshift shrines: ?Britons have long installed memorials in the landscape: Statues and monuments to war heroes, Princesses and the socially privileged. But nowadays we lay wreaths to those who die suddenly - ordinary folk killed as pedestrians, as drivers or by alcohol, all celebrated on our roadsides and in cities with simple, haunting roadside remberences.
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