Observe Remembrance Day from home this year, legion pleads - Action News
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Observe Remembrance Day from home this year, legion pleads

COVID-19 protocols will have a profoundeffect on this year'sRemembrance Day service at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

Nov. 11 ceremony at National War Memorial will be an intimate affair due to pandemic

The Royal Canadian Legion is asking people to watch this year's national Remembrance Day ceremony in Ottawa from home. (Stu Mills/CBC)

COVID-19 protocols will have a profoundeffect on this year'sRemembrance Day service at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

The Royal Canadian Legion is asking people to pay their respects from homerather than in person this Nov. 11.

"Don't come down to the monument," saidDanny Martin, the legion's director of ceremonies. "Stay home, watch it on television."

We feel it's important to have a live ceremony to remember our veterans, their sacrifices, but it's also important to protect people.- Danny Martin, Royal Canadian Legion

If you do try to show up in person, you won't get very close: barriers will be erected to keep people away from the memorial, and police will be on hand to keep everyonemoving along, Martin said.

Provincial restrictions on public gatherings have forced organizers to plan for a service with fewer than 100 guests inside the perimeter,around the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Ceremony scaled back

Martin said the planning for this year's ceremony began months ago.

"We didn't see this pandemic loosening up, and I guess we were right in the long run," he said. "We feel it's important to have a live ceremony to remember our veterans, their sacrifices, but it's also important to protect people."

There will be no scenes like this one in 2018 around the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Ottawa this Nov. 11. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

The list of invitees has been kept as short as possible. This year'svice-regal partyincludes the prime minister, Governor General, veterans affairs minister and the Silver Cross Mother, all seated two metres apart from one another.

Twenty-four veterans' groups will each lay a wreath, adding to the more than 200 thatwill have been laid in advance.

There will be a21-gun salutefollowing two minutes of silence, but this year's ceremony will have no paradesand very few dignitaries.In recent years, theceremony hasdrawn crowds of up to 40,000, rain or shine.

75thanniversary

Though they evaded bullets on Juno beach and tanks in the Rhineland, COVID-19 will stop the veterans who helped end the Second World War75 year ago from attending this year's Nov. 11 ceremony.

The youngest would be 93 years old, and an easy target for the coronavirus.

"[That's]the one part that really hits your heart," said Martin, who served 23 years in the Canadian Forces and grew up admiring the contributions of earlier vets.

"It's just too much of a risk," he said.

'I think we will find beauty and meaning in whatever we are able to do,' said Jamie Loback, director of the Ottawa Children's Choir. (Stu Mills/CBC)

For the past 48 years, the Ottawa Children's Choir has led the singing of O Canada and God Save the Queenon Nov. 11, but not this year. Instead,choir director Jamie Lobackand his colleagues mustselect a single soloist.

"We as a choir are fortunateto have this honour every year, and for this individual, it will be a great honour," said Loback. "I think we will find beauty and meaning in whatever we are able to do as an organization."

Flag campaign

Over at the Perley and Rideau Veterans'Health Centre, the Remembrance Day ceremony must also bescaled back, according to development manager Courtney Rock.

Courtney Rock is development manager at the Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health Centre, where this year's Nov. 11 ceremony will be drastically scaled back for the protection of residents. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Instead of hosting visitors, the Perley Rideau Foundation is allowing family and friends of residents to sponsor a Canadian flag, with the hope that by Nov.11, residents will look out onto the grounds and see 2,000 fluttering in the breeze. All the money raised will bereinvested in the care of the residents.

"Remembrance Day is a time to pay tributeand honour those who fought and served that's our goal," Rock said.

Perley Rideau residents won't gather in the cafeteria this year, and will instead watch the Remembrance Day ceremony in their rooms via Facebook. (Stu Mills/CBC)

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