Prairie Post (East Edition)

Swift Current Legion initiates project to install new memorial plaques at cenotaph

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com The online auction will start at 9 a.m. on March 1 and will continue until 8 p.m. on March 10. The link to the online auction is: https://www.32auctions.com/operationr­emember

Veterans who served on various Canadian peacekeepi­ng missions and in Afghanista­n will be honoured with the installati­on of two new memorial plaques on the Memorial Park cenotaph in downtown Swift Current.

The Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 56 in Swift Current is partnering with the local chapter of the Comrades Forever Motorcycle Club and the City of Swift Current to add the new memorial plaques to the cenotaph.

The Legion is also hosting an online auction from March 1-10 to raise funds for Legion programs in support of local veterans.

Legion member John Griffin, who is the public relations spokespers­on for the Swift Current Legion, said this initiative is known as Operation Remember.

“Operation Remember is all about the purchase and installati­on of two new plaques on the Swift Current cenotaph in Memorial Park,” he explained. “The one plaque is going to be dedicated to our peacekeepi­ng veterans who since the end of the Korean War have served and gave their lives on these missions. So these would be UN missions like to the Balkans, Egypt and Israel, Cyprus, and the Congo. And the second plaque is going to be dedicated to those who served and gave their lives during Canada’s mission in Afghanista­n from 2001 to 2014.”

More than 125,000 Canadians have served in peacekeepi­ng missions in over 35 countries and approximat­ely 130 have died during their service.

“They’re still dangerous,” he said about peacekeepi­ng missions. “Not only are you between two opposing forces, but there’s just general hazards, such as driving on the roads.”

More than 40,000 Canadian Armed Forces members served in Afghanista­n. There were 165 Canadian casualties (158 soldiers and seven civilians) during the campaign. Over 2,000 armed forces members were injured and many returning veterans are dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder.

The two plaques will be installed on the west side of the cenotaph, which is currently unused. The other three sides of the cenotaph are already used for different plaques. A large plaque on the south side commemorat­es the First and Second World War. A plaque in honour of veterans from the Korean War is installed on the east side. A plaque on

the north side of the cenotaph commemorat­es the service of the local regiment, the 209th Battalion, during the First World War.

The two new plaques will each be about 11x8 inches (28x20 centimetre­s) in size and its design will be similar to the existing plaque for the Korean War.

The estimated cost of each plaque will be about $365 and the Legion set a fundraisin­g goal of $1,000 for the online auction to ensure there will be sufficient funds for the project. However, to the surprise of the Legion the Comrades Forever Motorcycle Club generously offered to sponsor the entire cost of purchasing the two plaques.

“We’re very grateful for them for doing that, and it’s my understand­ing that they reached into their own pockets to make that happen,” Griffin said. “It was very generous of them and we’re very grateful. It was definitely something that we didn’t expect to have right away.”

After the early success

of this fundraisin­g initiative, the Legion decided to still go ahead with the online auction. The original intention was to use any money beyond the $1,000 fundraisin­g goal for Legion programs that will support local veterans. All money raised through the online auction will now be used for this purpose.

“So whether that be social assistance programs or mental health programs for veterans with PTSD, there’s no shortage of Legion programs that that money could be used for,” he said.

The Legion will continue to accept items for the online auction until March 1. A variety of auction items have already been donated by local businesses and individual­s, including a set of four tires, security safes to store valuables, a clothing package, a military record search package, a block heater and a soda stream.

A very unique contributi­on to the auction will be two veteran signed D-Day prints that were donated by Legion member Andy Keys.

“He went over to Normandy for the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day,” Griffin said. “He had taken these prints with him and got some D-Day veterans who attended the 75th anniversar­y to sign them and brought them back. Our plan was to have them in our yearly silent auction, because usually we do one at our banquet for Remembranc­e Day, but because of COVID we weren’t running our Remembranc­e Day banquet. So we’re bringing them out now.”

Anyone who wants to donate an item for the auction can contact Griffin by calling 306-741-0876 or sending an e-mail to rclbranch5­6sc@gmail.com

Cash donations are also welcome, but those donations will have to be made through the Swift Current Legion administra­tion office.

 ?? Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post ?? The Swift Current Legion’s project Operation Remember will add two new plaques to the Memorial Park cenotaph to honour the service of veterans during peacekeepi­ng missions and in Afghanista­n. Pictured are the existing plaques for the two world wars and the Korean War.
Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post The Swift Current Legion’s project Operation Remember will add two new plaques to the Memorial Park cenotaph to honour the service of veterans during peacekeepi­ng missions and in Afghanista­n. Pictured are the existing plaques for the two world wars and the Korean War.
 ?? ?? Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post The Swift Current Legion’s project Operation Remember will add two new plaques to the Memorial Park cenotaph to honour the service of veterans during peacekeepi­ng missions and in Afghanista­n. Pictured are the existing plaques to commemorat­e the Korean War and the 209th Battalion.
Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post The Swift Current Legion’s project Operation Remember will add two new plaques to the Memorial Park cenotaph to honour the service of veterans during peacekeepi­ng missions and in Afghanista­n. Pictured are the existing plaques to commemorat­e the Korean War and the 209th Battalion.
 ?? ?? Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post The Swift Current Legion's project Operation Remember will add two new plaques on the west side of the Memorial Park cenotaph, where there is currently no plaque installed.
Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post The Swift Current Legion's project Operation Remember will add two new plaques on the west side of the Memorial Park cenotaph, where there is currently no plaque installed.

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