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War veteran who survived D-Day will turn 100 on Remembrance Day

Leslie Jacques survived the Second World War and shares his secret for a long and happy life.

'I have a hard time believing I'm 100 years old because people don't live that long,' says war veteran

World War II veteran Leslie Jacques will be turning 100-years-old this Remembrance Day. (Kamil Karamali/CBC)

With his sense of humour and hearty laugh, it's hard to believe Leslie Jacques will soon turn100 years old.

Even he has trouble accepting it.

"I have a hard time believing I'm a 100 years old because people don't live that long," said Jacques laughing.

"Every day is a bonus."

Second World War veteran

It's rare to make it to 100 years of age, but what makes Jacques' storyunique is that theSecond World Warveteran is celebrating the milestone on Nov. 11, Remembrance Day.

Jacques, who now lives in Surrey, B.C. grew up on his family's farmin rural Saskatchewan with his five siblings.

Hevolunteered to join the Royal Canadian Air Force after the Great Depression in the 1930s.

"My parents were doing quite well until the Depression arrived. Then, all of a sudden, we didn't have any money coming in."

Leslie Jacques joined the Royal Canadian Air Force at the age of 25 as a wireless operator. He served from November 1941 to February of 1945. (Supplied)

Jacques trained to become a wireless operator and flew to England in December of 1942. He was 25 at the time.

Jacques joined a six-man squadron, tasked with flying over enemy territory and dropping paratroopers. The members of the team became inseparable.

"You were living in this dangerous time," said Jacques. "Every time we went out on an [operation], you didn't know whether you were going to come back or not."

"There was always that possibility, so we were a pretty close-knit group."

D-Day

Leslie Jacques (top right) says he his 6-man squadron was inseparable because they faced many dangerous situations. (Supplied)

Jacques said his most memorable day of thewar was D-Day, also known as the Normandy landings.

He saidhe and his team were one of the first to begin the attack, by dropping paratroopers behind enemy lines just after midnight on June 6, 1944.

It's was also a day that he nearly died.

"I was just standing up and looking out [the window] and I can see tracer bullets going through the air and the tracers were just coming in behind us," said Jacques.

"I got on the intercomand said 'skipper, let's get out of here.They're shooting at us.'"

Health problems

Jacques glowedas he reminisced about the past. But hismood darkened when asked about his health.

"Eyesight is not worth a damn," saidJacques. "Pardon my English"

Jacques spends most of his time sitting on a sofa at the Rosemary Heights assisted living facility. He has a motorized wheelchair, but he doesn't see the point of leaving his home with his limited vision.

Hismemory is fairly sharp, but he gets frustrated when he forgets important information.

"As I'm talking, I forget things," said Jacques. "They won't come to mind. So it's a bit embarrassing sometimes when you can't remember your wife's name."

Leslie Jacques now lives in an assisted living facility in Surrey. He says his step-daughter is planning a party for him on his 100th birthday. (Kamil Karamali/CBC)

Secret to longevity

Jacques secret to a long life? "You have a scotch every night and that guarantees you won't have a heart attack or a stroke," said Jacques.

He wasmarried three times and headoptedtwo daughters with his first wife, which he described asone of the happiest moments of his life.

He's also travelled back to England and vacationed in Zimbabwe with his current wife, Anne.

All of those happy moments have kept him going, he said, though he stressed again the value of his favourite drink.

"I have one drink of scotch every night and it works fine," said Jacques. "It works for me."

AUDIO: CBC reporter Geoff Leo interviews his grandfather on his 100th birthday

Geoff Leo called up his Papa Les Jacques to wish him a happy 100th birthday on November 11th.