Quebecers honour battle sacrifice - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:45 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Quebecers honour battle sacrifice

Thousands of Quebecers marked Remembrance Day at ceremonies across the province, including a moving memorial in Montreal that drew generations of veterans.

Valcartier soldiers pay homage to comrades killed in Afghanistan this year

Soldiers gave a 21-gun salute in front of McGill University's Arts Building. ((Corinne Smith/CBC))
Thousands of Quebecers marked Remembrance Day at ceremonies across the province, including a moving memorial in Montreal that drew generations of veterans.

A long line of RCMP officers dressed in red serge joined Canadian soldiers and reservists, who stood at attention for an hour and a halfon McGill University's Lower Field, while dignitaries, including Mayor Grald Tremblay, pausedfor Remembrance Day.

Soldiers gave a thunderous 21-gun salute along McGill's main avenue as hundreds of people wearing poppies watched from a safe distance.

Soldiers from the Valcartier base gathered in Quebec City for Remembrance Day. ((Catou Mackinnon/CBC))
Students mingled withSecond World Warveterans, who stood alongside the spouses of soldiersnow serving in Afghanistan, to commemorate the sacrifices made by Canadians in uniform.

Wednesday's ceremony was difficult for Shannon Coates, who lives on the St-Hubert military base while her husband Sgt. Landon Perry serves in Afghanistan with the Princess Patricia Light Infantry.

"It's very emotional, obviously, with him being overseas, and not being here," Coates said, holding back tears. "It's been really hard. We lost one of our best friends in the spring ... and two other friends in 2006."

The crowd at McGill was dotted with white haired veterans as well, who say they cherish the chance to look back at their war days.

"It means the world to me," said Dorothy Perks, a Pointe-Sainte-Charles resident who served in England during World War Two. "I live for these. I lost my father in 1917, I lost my borther, I lost my husband, and I was in the war myself for five years," said the octogenarian, who wore her medals to Wednesday's events.

That's why I come to these events."

This year's ceremony was held at McGill because of road construction around Montreal's permanent cenotaph memorial.

Human loss is raw for Valcartier soldiers

Liberal MP Justin Trudeau lays a wreath at a makeshift cenotaph on McGill University's Lower Field. ((Corinne Smith/CBC))
In Quebec City, about 250 soldiers from the nearby Valcartier basecameinto town for a Remembrance Day ceremony.

They were joined byPremier Jean Charest and other politiciansat the Croix du Souvenir cenotaph near the massive stone gates to the Old City.

Soldiers serving in Afghanistan were honoured by the widow of Cpl. Jonathan Couturier, a 23-year-old Valcartier soldier killed by an improved explosive device this fall. She laid a wreath in their name.

Then student Qoma McKeown-Philip read a poem he wrote for the occasion.

"If I met a Canadian veteran, limping along on his injured leg, I would like to tell him he is a great man," he said.

There are currently 125 full-time soldiers from Quebec serving in Afghanistan. The next deployment from Valcartier is in 2010.