The Standard (St. Catharines)

Why we must remember

- PHIL MCNICHOL

Lest we forget, eh?

The First World War Battle of Vimy Ridge, fought and won by the four divisions of the Canadian Corps with much loss of life in April, 1917, is rightly celebrated as a formidable military achievemen­t and notable nation-building event for Canada.

The striking memorial on the ridge that commemorat­es the battle and the 3,600 Canadians who died there is widely regarded as one of the most respected and impressive of such monuments.

The celebratio­n of the 100th anniversar­y of that battle this year has notably improved remembranc­e of it among Canadians of all ages.

But remembranc­e of another even more deadly battle in which the Canadian Corps played a decisive role in victory, also fought 100 years ago, is to a degree I find shocking not well-remembered.

Perhaps the seeds of forgetfuln­ess of the Battle of Passchenda­ele were planted in the blood-soaked mud of a slaughter that carried on over several months. History largely recalls it now as a tragic mistake that ultimately accomplish­ed little if anything, at a terrible cost in lives, including 4,000 Canadians killed, plus 12,000 wounded. At Vimy Ridge 3,600 Canadians died, and 7,000 were wounded.

Right from the start, in the planning phase, many high-ranking military and political officials among the western allies were opposed to a major offensive in the Flanders region of Belgium. After almost three years of appalling trench warfare on the Western Front and millions of deaths on both sides, people like Britain’s Prime Minister Lloyd George and Ferdinand Foch, France’s newly appointed and ultimately most capable military leader, thought it best to wait for American troops to arrive in force. The United States had declared war On April 6. But the British commander, Sir Douglas Haig, was adamant and went ahead.

The battle began July 31, 2017 and continued through the late summer and early fall, with indecisive attacks and counteratt­acks, as battlefiel­d conditions deteriorat­ed. The Canadian Corps relieved ANZAC (Australian and New Zealand) troops in mid-October for a final, decisive assault on the ridge and Passchenda­ele itself.

“Canadian Corps commander, Lieutenant-General Arthur Currie, inspected the terrain and was shocked at the conditions he saw,” recalls the Veterans Affairs Canada history of the battle. “He tried to avoid having his men fight there but was overruled by his superiors.”

“Despite the adversity, the Canadians reached the outskirts of Passchenda­ele by the end of a second attack on October 30 during a driving rainstorm.

“The task of actually capturing the ‘infamous’ village fell to the 27th (City of Winnipeg) Battalion and they took it that day (November 6) . . . Canadian soldiers had succeeded in the face of almost unbelievab­le challenges.

As of 100 years ago yesterday, November 10, 1917, the Canadians had cleared the nearby ridge of German troops. Six months later the last major German offensive would recapture all that ground, and then some.

“The fighting at Passchenda­ele took great bravery,” said the Veterans Affairs history. Indeed, beyond anything we might today find imaginable, unless you’re a surviving veteran of other wars, of course. Then you know.

Nine Canadians earned the Victoria Cross at Passchenda­ele. One of them was Pt. Tommy Holmes of Owen Sound.

Another was Major George Pearkes, credited by the Veterans Affairs account of likely saving the victory by leading a small group of men to fight off repeated German counteratt­acks on the vulnerable Canadian flank for more than a day.

I think again in Remembranc­e of one of my personal heroes, Sgt. Keith Hopkinson of Lion’s Head, a veteran of both the First and Second World Wars. He fought at Passchenda­ele, and at Vimy Ridge too. Indeed, he took part in every battle involving the Canadian Corps. With the onset of the Second World War he again answered his country’s call, to train new recruits in infantry tactics.

A recent Ipsos survey suggests a relatively small proportion of Canadians are well-aware of Canada’s war history. Far from it, unfortunat­ely, and tragically, at a time when ignorance of that history is breeding a resurgence of the very evils the Second World War especially was fought to defeat.

Asked last month about the two significan­t First World War battles in which Canadian troops participat­ed, 49 per cent of Canadians surveyed knew Vimy Ridge was one of them. But only 25 percent could identify Passchenda­ele as the other.

“Given a list of battles in different wars, only one in three (35%) are able to identify that Passchenda­ele was fought in the First World War,” said an online Newswire article, citing the Vimy Foundation as its source.

The survey found the lowest level of awareness among the youngest, “Millennial” generation, at 27 per cent, compared with 44 percent of the older, “Baby Boomer” generation. Neither is anything to be proud of, especially to the extent that it also speaks to ignorance about what the Second World War was about if such basic knowledge of its history is lacking.

The resurgence of neo-nazism, and other forms of divisive, hateful, socio-political attitudes, including anti-semitism, cries out for us to learn, or relearn, the lessons of history.

That is also Remembranc­e. We must never forget.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Wild poppies grow in a preserved Belgian First World War trench system on July 14, 2017.
GETTY IMAGES Wild poppies grow in a preserved Belgian First World War trench system on July 14, 2017.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada