Times Colonist

Canadians flock to Vimy centennial memorials

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Though there are no surviving veterans who fought at Vimy Ridge, Canadians across the country are making sure their legacy is not forgotten on the battle’s centennial anniversar­y.

Those who were not among the 25,000 Canadians at the site of the battle in France to attend a ceremony on Sunday gathered in communitie­s from coast to coast to remember those who risked or lost their lives in April 1917.

Debbie Ginter, 26, of Steinbach, Man., travelled to Ottawa’s Vimy ceremony because she said she couldn’t make it to France.

She came to honour a man she never met, her great-grandfathe­r Frederick Fox, who fought and survived Vimy — but only after experienci­ng unimaginab­le horror.

Like so many others, he’d been gassed and left. He was buried alive for four days before he was pulled from the mud. He would lose his right arm, but would return home to live another 41 years before dying in 1958.

Ginter knelt in silence under the clear blue sky at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, framed by limp flags on a windless morning.

She said more people of her generation need to remember the heroic sacrifices of those long gone.

“The selflessne­ss that they had, the respect they had for each other, and just all the turmoil and the sacrifice that they’ve done, everything that they lost — it was all for this country that they never saw,” Ginter said.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna opened a sombre one-hour remembranc­e at the National War Memorial under clear blue skies. The battle, she said, marked “our coming of age as a country.”

In Toronto, dozens of people gathered at the cenotaph at Old City Hall, where wreaths were laid.

“Vimy was the first time where Canada really came together as a nation to accomplish something important,” said 15-yearold Abe Arafat, who delivered the poem La Rose et le Réséda at the Toronto ceremony. “So, although we’re celebratin­g Canada 150, it’s almost the 100th anniversar­y of the national sentiment.”

Nadine Grill, who works with the education group the Vimy Foundation, said she was touched by how many people took time to commemorat­e the day.

“There aren’t any soldiers left from the First World War, so it’s really up to us as a community, as Canadians, to make sure that their stories aren’t lost,” she said.

In Edmonton, a parade of soldiers, pipers and cadets marched from the provincial legislatur­e through downtown streets to the cenotaph at City Hall.

In Montreal, a solemn ceremony was held at the newly inaugurate­d Place de Vimy — a section of a west-end park that was renamed in honour of the 1917 battle.

The creation of the space was announced last year after the city was criticized for stripping Vimy’s name from another park, which was rechristen­ed after the late separatist premier, Jacques Parizeau.

On Sunday, dozens of cadets lined the walkway to the park’s cenotaph holding cross-shaped signs in remembranc­e of the Montreal-based military units that fought at Vimy, as dignitarie­s laid wreaths of red and white flowers.

In Victoria, a special open house and commemorat­ion of both the battle and the Canadian National Vimy Memorial was held at the Bay Street Armoury.

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