National Post

The Vimy oaks

- morgan Lowrie in Montreal

In April 1917, a Canadian soldier standing on a war-ravaged battlefiel­d in France pocketed a souvenir to send home: a handful of acorns from a downed oak tree at Vimy Ridge.

Now, a century after the First World War ended, oaks descended from those acorns have begun growing at parks and cenotaphs across Canada. And the Vimy oaks have made the journey back to France, where they will grow in a new centennial park beside the Canadian National Vimy Memorial.

The project is possible thanks to the late Lt. Leslie Miller, who gathered the acorns from the denuded site of the 1917 battle and planted them on his farm in Scarboroug­h, Ont.

Ralph Coleman, a vicepresid­ent of the non-profit group Vimy Oaks Legacy, said the trees are a powerful symbol of the connection­s between Canada and France and of soldiers’ resilience.

“There’s such symmetry to it,” he said of the oaks returning to France. “Out of death comes life and regenerati­on, and it comes full circle.

“There were no oak trees left on Vimy Ridge, and now the oak trees that grew up in Canada descended from Vimy Ridge are sending their own descendant­s back.”

The park in France, set to be to inaugurate­d Friday in advance of the centennial of the war’s end, will feature four concentric rings representi­ng the four Canadian divisions that fought at Vimy.

The 1.6-hectare park was created by the Vimy Foundation, a charity that educates Canadians about the milestone battle.

Coleman said the idea of sending back the trees began in the mid-2000s, when the founder of Vimy Oaks Legacy, Monty McDonald, travelled to the famous battlefiel­d and realized that none of the original oak trees at Vimy had survived the intense shelling.

McDonald had worked on Miller’s farm, and the Vimy veteran was like a grandfathe­r to him.

As Coleman tells it, McDonald thought: “Wow, wouldn’t it be a nice gesture to repatriate some oak trees back here from Canada and a nice gesture to my surrogate grandfathe­r, Leslie Miller.”

In 2015, cuttings were taken from the original trees in Scarboroug­h and grafted on to roots at a nursery in Dundas, Ont., where they began to grow as new trees that could be flown to Vimy.

The group had hoped to have the project ready for the 2017 centennial of the battle, but that fell through when an outbreak of a disease affecting oak trees led the French government to ban tree imports.

Instead, McDonald gathered acorns from the original trees and flew them to France in 2016, where they have been growing in a nursery and will be transplant­ed to the park in time for the inaugurati­on.

Meanwhile, the saplings grown in Dundas are making their way across Canada, where over 800 have been ordered for planting at legions, parks, war monuments and private residences.

Three are destined for a Montreal park dedicated to Vimy. City councillor Sterling Downey said the idea of using Vimy oaks came after a microburst swept through the park last year, destroying many of its mature trees.

Downey, the son of a veteran, said the trees symbolize the ability of both humans and nature to overcome great adversity.

The gesture is appreciate­d by Della Robertson, a Sergeant at Arms of a local Royal Canadian Legion branch whose grandfathe­r served at Vimy. Robertson, 54, was at the Montreal park in uniform Sunday as local politician­s and citizens held a small Remembranc­e ceremony.

She said she likes the idea of something to connect the past to the present at a time when fewer young people seem to feel personal links to Canada’s military history.

“You need to work to keep that connection,” she said. “There are some schools that do ceremonies, but very little. There’s very little connecting to 100 years ago.”

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A sign for an oak at Place de Vimy in a Montreal park on Sunday. Months after the park was inaugurate­d in 2017, many of its trees were destroyed in a fierce windstorm. Now, as the city replants, it will include oaks descended from acorns brought back from Vimy by a Canadian soldier in 1917.
GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS A sign for an oak at Place de Vimy in a Montreal park on Sunday. Months after the park was inaugurate­d in 2017, many of its trees were destroyed in a fierce windstorm. Now, as the city replants, it will include oaks descended from acorns brought back from Vimy by a Canadian soldier in 1917.
 ??  ?? Della Robertson
Della Robertson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada