Lethbridge Herald

CANADA REMEMBERS

SMALL CROWDS BRAVE THE PANDEMIC TO ATTEND CEREMONIES

- Lee Berthiaume

The sacrifices of Canadians past and present were honoured alongside messages of hope Wednesday as small crowds braved the pandemic to mark Remembranc­e Day across the country and thousands more paid homage from their own homes.

Past ceremonies have largely focused on the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who fought in the two great wars, and this year was the 75th anniversar­y of the end of the Second World War.

Still, with eight members of the Canadian Armed Forces having died while on duty this year, and thousands more serving in long-term care homes battered by COVID-19, commemorat­ions had an added level of resonance.

“We feel it as an organizati­on, as an institutio­n, when we lose people,” outgoing chief of the defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance told The Canadian Press.

“But we must be resilient and resolute and be able to carry on, because the defence of Canada happens here at home and abroad.”

During his annual Remembranc­e Day sermon at the National War Memorial in Ottawa, Rabbi Reuven Bulka praised members of the Canadian Armed Forces for not flinching when called upon to serve in long-term care facilities struggling to contain outbreaks.

“Who responded without hesitation? Without being deterred by the potential dangers they faced? Our soldiers. And who once again delivered in a time of national crisis? Our soldiers,” he said.

Many of the traditiona­l elements of the annual ceremony played out in Ottawa but signs of the pandemic were everywhere.

Those participat­ing in the ceremony wore masks, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Gov. Gen. Julie

Payette and Debbie Sullivan, this year’s Silver Cross Mother, whose son Chris Saunders died while serving on one of Canada’s four submarines in 2004.

Noticeably absent were surviving veterans from the Second World War and the Korean War, whose age puts them at particular risk from the novel coronaviru­s.

One who did attend was Bill Black, 87, who served aboard the destroyer HMCS Cayuga during the Korean War before becoming a submariner in the Navy. He retired as a lieutenant-commander.

Black, who was invited by the Royal Canadian Legion, said he was disappoint­ed Canadians were encouraged to watch on TV or online.

“I think they could have had more people here,” he said. “I think they could have opened it up a bit and advised people to use the six-foot rule distancing and wear masks. But nonetheles­s, it’s the way it is.”

Chris Turenne was part of a small crowd watching from behind metal barriers erected around the National War Memorial. He said the event should have gone ahead as normal.

“There’s been other protests and rallies, and they seemed to be fine,” he said. “I don’t know why this should be any different.”

Other scaled-down Remembranc­e Day ceremonies were held in communitie­s across the country, including in Toronto where Ontario Premier Doug Ford and a small group of dignitarie­s and military personnel attended a service at Queen’s Park.

“We face a new enemy in COVID-19,” Ford said at one point during the ceremony, which featured the unveiling of a new memorial to those who served in Afghanista­n.

“We must take care because our health and safety is paramount. But those we honour are with us in spirit. They’re with us from the safety of their homes.”

At another small ceremony in front of Old City Hall, Toronto Mayor John Tory said Wednesday marked the 100th anniversar­y of the community’s inaugural Remembranc­e Day commemorat­ion.

“This year, despite the COVID-19 pandemic, we have ensured that the chain of remembranc­e is not broken,” he said.

At Sunnybrook Veterans Centre in Toronto’s north end, 37,500 Canadian flags were planted outside for the 375 veteran residents to view from their rooms.

There was no parade or marching in Montreal, and the reveille was played on a portable speaker. Yet the ceremony remained a moving experience for veterans like William Howe, who served with the Black Watch and Royal Canadian Regiment.

“I lost friends overseas, so not having friends here with me doesn’t help matters much,” Howe said.

A similar scene played out at the Grand Parade in downtown Halifax where a small audience of only 22 guests gathered in front of the local cenotaph, and in British Columbia, where about 50 people watched ceremonies from outside of constructi­on gates that surrounded cenotaphs at Vancouver’s Victory Square and at the provincial legislatur­e in Victoria.

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