Montreal Gazette

One last plot for any ex- spy

CSIS seeks section for members and families in Ottawa cemetery

- JIM BRONSKILL

It looks like one of Canada’s most historic graveyards is about to get a little, um, spookier.

The Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service wants to create a national burial site for its employees at Ottawa’s Beechwood Cemetery.

The intelligen­ce service and a society representi­ng many former spies have approached Beechwood about reserving part of the venerable resting place for CSIS members and their families.

The cemetery, a short drive east of Parliament Hill, already has dedicated sections for the RCMP, National Defence and Ottawa police.

These areas are “an impressive and touching tribute to the service and sacrifices of Canada’s men and women in uniform,” CSIS director Michel Coulombe said in a letter to James Patterson, Beechwood’s director of family services.

A CSIS- specific section would be a “welcome and appropriat­e addition” to the cemetery, Coulombe said in the July letter, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

“A preliminar­y survey indicated a significan­t amount of interest among employees in purchasing a plot,” Coulombe wrote following a May meeting between Patterson and backers of the plan.

“The success of the endeavour will rely on careful and detailed planning of the site and monument.”

Coulombe suggested further discussion of the cemetery’s offer of help in setting up a charitable fund for the “developmen­t of and improvemen­t to” the CSIS National Memorial Cemetery.

The project is “still at the initial stages,” said CSIS spokeswoma­n Tahera Mufti.

Establishe­d in 1873, Beechwood is the burial place of luminaries including Prime Minister Robert Borden, physicist Gerhard Herzberg, NDP leader Tommy Douglas and poet Archibald Lampman.

Six years ago, Parliament declared it the National Cemetery of Canada.

All current and former employees, regardless of their job classifica­tion, would be eligible for burial in the CSIS cemetery, said Don Mahar, national president of the Pillar Society of spy service retirees.

Mahar already has a stone at Beechwood featuring the crests of former employers the RCMP, CSIS and the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent — Canada’s electronic spy agency — along with his wife’s nursing school crest.

If CSIS employees were also former members of the RCMP Security Service, dissolved in 1984 when CSIS was created, they may choose to be buried in either the RCMP or CSIS cemetery, said Mahar, a driving force behind the project.

Other possibilit­ies include moving the existing stones of still- living members to the planned new CSIS section, or creating a special space for those who served with both the RCMP and CSIS, he added.

All who participat­e will be responsibl­e for the purchase of their plot, gravestone and engraving, with no government subsidizat­ion, Mahar said.

“But the reality is that this could certainly change. Similar to the Canadian Forces and the RCMP, the men and women of CSIS wish to have a national memorial site where they and their family members can be laid to rest with colleagues.”

 ?? F R E D C H A RT R A N D / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S ?? The Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service wants to create a national burial site for its employees.
F R E D C H A RT R A N D / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S The Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service wants to create a national burial site for its employees.

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