The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘Canadian heroes span every conflict,’ premier says

We must not forget lessons of past, adds lieutenant-governor

- ALANNA RIZZA

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford encouraged Canadians to remember soldiers past and present Sunday as they reflected on the centennial of the end of the First World War.

“Canadian heroes span every conflict and every generation,” Ford told a crowd assembled in front of the Ontario Veterans’ Memorial at the provincial legislatur­e.

“Many made the ultimate sacrifice, and for that — for keeping our country safe, we will be forever grateful,” he said. “Because of their courage and sacrifice, most Canadians will never know the horrors of war.”

The Remembranc­e Day ceremony saw as many as 500 troops march toward Queen’s Park while John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders Fields” was read aloud.

The Queen’s Park ceremony was one of many similar events held at legions, cenotaphs and churches across the province.

Lt.-Gov. Elizabeth Dowdeswell addressed the assembled crowd, saying that while immense progress has been made in the last century, we must not forget the lessons of the past.

“Today we are living in strange and uncertain times — times when democracie­s around the world are fragile. We face significan­t change that all too often threatens to tear us apart,” she said. “In many ways that’s an age-old story,” she said. “History’s many conflicts, the ones we remember today, must remind us of our mutual vulnerabil­ity and of the imperative to do our utmost to foster empathy and peace.”

Richard Rohmer, honorary lieutenant-general for the Canadian Armed Forces and veteran of the Second World War, also spoke to the crowd and acknowledg­ed the soldiers who served before him.

“I am six years younger than the event today which turns 100,” he noted, referencin­g the signing of the armistice that ended the fighting in 1918.

Ford said his government is forever grateful for the sacrifices soldiers have made, and listed some of his efforts to make veterans’ lives “a little easier.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Honorary Lt.-Gen. Richard Rohmer places a wreath during the Ceremony of Remembranc­e held Sunday at Queen’s Park in Toronto.
CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV THE CANADIAN PRESS Honorary Lt.-Gen. Richard Rohmer places a wreath during the Ceremony of Remembranc­e held Sunday at Queen’s Park in Toronto.

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