The Prince George Citizen

D-Day anniversar­y honoured

- Keith DOUCETTE, Colin PERKEL

Canadians were urged to heed the eternal lessons of the Second World War as ceremonies commemorat­ing the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day were held Thursday in cities across the country.

Veterans and dignitarie­s including Gov. Gen. Julie Payette attended a ceremony in Halifax marking the June 6, 1944 Allied invasion of France that turned the tide of the war.

Payette began her day on the sands of Juno Beach, and she told the audience in Halifax it was impossible to imagine the horror that unfolded 75 years earlier when the small parcel of land became “hell on Earth.”

She thanked the veterans present and stressed the importance of rememberin­g their sacrifice.

“We need to remember, but one, perhaps, of the most important lessons that we get from this is a lesson of hope,” Payette said. “The reason, at the end, was to provide a free world, opportunit­ies for all to live a free life, and that is a message of hope.”

Havelyn Chiasson, 98, who landed with the first wave of troops on Juno Beach as a 23-year-old with the North Shore New Brunswick Regiment, was among the seven aging veterans introduced in Halifax, each of whom held a rose. The roses were placed alongside a pair of black combat boots symbolizin­g Canadian soldiers’ journey to the battlefiel­d and the comrades left behind.

The program had called for the veterans to hand the roses to a cadet, but those who could were determined to walk over to place the flowers themselves, accompanyi­ng the gesture with a salute.

Historian Don Julien, executive director of the Confederac­y of Mainland Mi’kmaq, highlighte­d the contributi­on of Indigenous soldiers to the war effort. He told the story of Pte. Charles Doucette, a Mi’kmaq man who was captured after landing on June 6, 1944.

He and 19 other Canadians were executed at the Abbaye d’Ardenne on orders from a Panzer Division captain, Julien recounted.

In an early morning ceremony at the cenotaph in front of Toronto’s Old City Hall attended by veterans, dignitarie­s and members of the public, Mayor John Tory honoured the 14,000 Canadians who stormed Juno Beach in Normandy.

“Their courage and their determinat­ion led to some successes in those early morning hours but that success came at a huge price,” said Tory, noting that 359 Canadian soldiers lost their lives on D-Day.

Other Canadians were also marking the anniversar­y, with the veterans who are the last living link to the largest seaborne invasion in history as venerated guests of honour.

Capt. Martin Maxwell. 95, of the Glider Pilot Regiment, British 6th Airborne Division, shared his story in Toronto about being among the first to land in Normandy the night before the invasion.

“My D-Day started on June 5. Our commanding officer... came in and said, ‘Boys, we’ve trained for this for a long time. You’re the first ones in, so I have to tell you some of you will not be back,”’ said Maxwell.

Maxwell urged Canadians to keep the lessons of the Second World War in their daily thoughts.

“When I look at the world and see mosques, synagogues, churches have been attacked and people murdered, I think back of what I saw... and they may say, ‘What the hell have you done with the tomorrows we gave you?”’

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? D-Day veteran Art Eyres is emotional while saluting a memorial for soldiers who fell at the Battle of Normandy during a ceremony commemorat­ing the 75th anniversar­y of D-day in Halifax on Thursday.
CP PHOTO D-Day veteran Art Eyres is emotional while saluting a memorial for soldiers who fell at the Battle of Normandy during a ceremony commemorat­ing the 75th anniversar­y of D-day in Halifax on Thursday.

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