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Charlottetown Rotarians mark 75th anniversary of D-Day invasion

The Charlottetown Rotary Club held its annual Remembrance Day program today, paying special attention tothe 75th anniversary of D-Day, the Allied forces invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe in World War II.

'In 5 years, there won't very many of them left'

RCMP Staff Sgt. Ken Spenceley, Lt.-Col. Allan Trainor and Capt. Harold MacGuigan lay a wreath to commemorate all Islanders who died in the First and Second World Wars, Korean War, the war in Afghanistan and while on peacekeeping missions. (Tom Steepe/CBC)

The Charlottetown Rotary Club held its annual Remembrance Day program Monday, paying special attention tothe 75th anniversary of D-Day, the Allied force's invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe in World War II.

The ceremonyfocused onIslanders who gave their lives during the operation.

"Prince Edward Island itself had, between the two World Wars and the Korean War, almost a thousand soldiers die from a province of a very small population," said chair Angus Orford.

"I think it's importantwhen we take part in Remembrance Dayis to understand the risks that these soldiers, sailors, airmen put themselves through and those that also made the ultimate sacrifice."

The audience alsoheard about the history and the role Island soldiers played during the D-day invasion.

Played a large role

Mark Wells was among a small delegation from P.E.I. who travelled to France last summeron the occasion of the75th anniversaryof theNormandylandings.

The Charlottetown Rotary Remembrance Day ceremony marked the 75th anniversary of D-Day, the Allied force's invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe in World War II. (Tom Steepe/CBC)

"To go and honourthe veterans my great-uncle included, my grandfather, you know retrace their steps through D-Day was a very fulfilling experience and an eye-opener," Wells told the audience.

"To experience the beaches that they landed on and to be there was a surreal experience, it was sobering to say the least."

Some 14,000 Canadians were part of the D-Day invasion, and 359 lost their lives.

Take an interest

"It being the 75th, I think the most important part was to see the last remaining veterans of that day, 75 years later," said retired Lt.-Col. Allan Trainor.

"In five years, there won't very many of them left. That's why it's important to our group to go over there again, pay homage to them and pay homage to all the relatives that we had that were not only buried in Normandy, but in different parts of France."

Organizers of the annual event said theyhopemore people, particularly youth, take more of an interest in theyoung men and women who were barely older than they are when they fought and died.

"If you've had a relative that participated or made the ultimate sacrifice died in battle, maybe take a little bit of interest," said Orford.

"With the internet, the information that's available, books have been written that are providing more and more detail, and I think you'd be quite surprised that you'd be able to find somebody and learn their story and get a better understanding of what they did."

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