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How you can experience Remembrance Day 2021 in Calgary

While COVID-19 means some changes to which Remembrance Day ceremonies are going ahead this year in person, there are a variety of ways you can mark the day in and around Calgary.

COVID-19 means some changes to which Remembrance Day ceremonies are going ahead this year in person

Age connects students and veterans as poppies laid on Calgary graves in remembrance

3 years ago
Duration 2:45
Students from St. Margaret School took part in the No Stone Left Alone initiative that honoured veterans not much older when they died fighting for freedom.

Katelyn Norekwalks among dozens of fellowSt. Margaret School students laying poppies at the headstones of Canadian soldierswho fought and died in past warsat Calgary's Burnsland Cemetery.

"I am very thankful for everything they have done for us," said Norek, who isin Grade 9. "They put their lives out for us. Canada wouldn't be what it is today without them. I am very grateful for all of them, for everything they have done."

  • WATCH |Students laypoppiesat veterans' gravesitesin the video above

While the students had an opportunity Monday to honour the war dead in person, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic means some traditional ways of marking Remembrance Day in Calgary and area won't be happening this year,while other ceremonies may not be open to the public or may have restrictions.

Here are some of the ways you can mark the day:

The Military Museums

The Military Museums will hold a public outdoor ceremony but attendance requires proof of double COVID-19 vaccination. Guests of honour will begin arriving at 10 a.m., with the ceremony commencing just before 11 a.m.

Calgary students attended a Remembrance Day ceremony at Burnsland Cemetery on Monday. (Dave Gilson/CBC)


For people unable to physically attend, a virtual service is to be live streamed ontheorganization's Facebook page.

VeteransFood Bank of Calgary donations won't be accepted at the Military Museums this year due to COVID.

The Field of Crosses

Field of Crosses is a five-acre visual tribute to the sacrifices made by the thousands of soldiers from southern Alberta that's installed every November. The crosses are placed in military cemetery formation by hundreds of volunteers, on a piece of highly visible land alongMemorial Drive.

The Field of Crosses is open to the public daily up to and including Nov. 10, and there are daily sunrise and sunset ceremoniesat settimes.While there's a sunrise ceremony on Nov. 10, the park closes at 9 a.m. and won't reopen until 4 p.m. as volunteers place candles in front of each of the 3,500 crosses fora special Night of Lights.

The Remembrance Day ceremonyitself at the Field of Crosses will not be open to the public this year due to COVID public health concerns. The ceremony, which gets under way at 10:30 a.m. Thursday,is limited to invited guests only, but everyone else can tune into the live stream.

The park will beclosed to the public on Remembrance Day until 2 p.m., with security to enforce it.

Royal Canadian Legion

Select branches of the Legion will hold in-person ceremonies but the traditional event at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium is on pause this year.

Other nearby virtual ceremonies

The following ceremonies will be available through a live stream only:

National Remembrance Day Ceremony

Each year on Nov. 11, the Royal Canadian Legion hosts theNational Remembrance Day Ceremonyat the National War Memorial in Ottawa starting at 10:45 a.m. ET/8:45 a.m. MT.

CBC News will carry the ceremony liveviaCBCNews.ca, theCBC News Facebook page, CBC TV, CBC News Network,CBC Gem and the CBC News app.


Katelyn Norek, a Grade 9 student from Calgarys St. Margaret school, attended a Remembrance Day ceremony at Burnsland Cemetery on Monday. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Meanwhile, the students visiting Burnsland Cemetery on Monday found it an emotional experience.

"I think it's good that we come and experience this for ourselves, and get a feel for what it was like, and be a part of it," Noreksaid.

Another student, Sofia Guerrero, noticed the ages on the headstones.

"I think it was a very beautiful ceremony. Everyone should take this day to remember everyone who served for Canada, and who helped us be who we are today," the 14-year-old told reporters on Monday.

"Some of these ages, obviously, it pains me to see how young they were, because they deserved to live and enjoy life a little bit more."

Sofia Guerrero attended a Remembrance Day ceremony at the Burnsland Cemetery on Monday. She's a student at Calgarys St. Margaret school. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Student Simon Thomas says the event really makes him ponder.

"I am thinking about what people have done for our country and just the heart and mindset we have to go into to pay respects to these people and what they have done for us," he said.

"I think they are very brave people. It's sad to see people not much older than me go to war and maybe not come back. We still need to honour them and pay our respects."

John Melbourne was an air force pilot between 1953 and 1964 working primarily in search and rescue operations. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

John Melbourne, who wasan air force pilot between 1953 and 1964 working primarily in search and rescue operations, partook in the event with the students.

"This is wonderful," he said.

"This gives the young people an opportunity to appreciate the number of Canadians who were also their age, who gave their lives over the years in the various conflicts that Canada has been involved in. It does my heart good to see these young people laying a poppy on a veteran's grave. I am very honoured to be a part of this."

Students from Calgary's St. Margaret School lay poppies at the headstones of fallen southern Alberta soldiers, at an event Monday at Burnsland Cemetery. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story stated that the students visited the Field of Crosses on Monday. The location was actually the Burnsland Cemetery, not the Field of Crosses, which is along Memorial Drive.
    Nov 09, 2021 2:22 PM MT