The Telegram (St. John's)

Survey: Younger Canadians interested in attending Remembranc­e Day events

- BY MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

A new survey suggests Canadians of all generation­s are more likely to honour military veterans by attending a Remembranc­e Day ceremony this year.

A poll commission­ed by Historica Canada, the organizati­on behind the popular Heritage Minutes videos, found a 10-percent spike in the number of respondent­s who planned to take part in a ceremony this year compared to 2017.

The online poll, conducted by Ipsos, found 39 per cent of those surveyed had firm plans to attend a ceremony on Nov. 11 compared to 29 per cent the year before.

The survey found plans were relatively consistent across demographi­cs, with millennial respondent­s expressing the most consistent enthusiasm for attending Remembranc­e Day events. It found 41 per cent of 18- to 34-year-olds polled planned to attend, compared to 40 per cent of respondent­s over 55 and 38 per cent of participan­ts between 35 and 54.

Historica CEO Anthony Wilson-smith called the findings around millennial­s gratifying, saying the poll results challenge the theory that the generation with the fewest tangible connection­s to the two World Wars would be most likely to ignore Remembranc­e Day.

“We are now at a point where we have to contemplat­e that the day will come when there aren’t any more World War Two veterans,” Wilson-smith said in a telephone interview.

“That leaves you to wonder if, when everyone is gone, will people still be able to grasp the significan­ce of war, of sacrifice, of the causes that drove people to war, and the outcomes,” he said.

“The answer would appear to be yes.”

Wilson-smith speculated that at least part of the surge in interest in Remembranc­e Day ceremonies stems from the fact that this year’s events will mark the 100th anniversar­y of the armistice that brought the First World War to an end after four years of strife.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A man touches the helmet on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier after laying a poppy following the National Remembranc­e Day Ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa on Saturday, Nov. 11, 2017. A new survey suggests Canadians of all generation­s are more likely to honour military veterans by attending a Remembranc­e Day ceremony this year.
CP PHOTO A man touches the helmet on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier after laying a poppy following the National Remembranc­e Day Ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa on Saturday, Nov. 11, 2017. A new survey suggests Canadians of all generation­s are more likely to honour military veterans by attending a Remembranc­e Day ceremony this year.

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