A 'daunting task' to identify Indigenous soldiers who fought in the Battle of Hong Kong - Action News
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Indigenous

A 'daunting task' to identify Indigenous soldiers who fought in the Battle of Hong Kong

The Hong Kong Veterans Commemorative Association (HKVCA) has spent the last year trying to identify and recognize Indigenous veterans who fought in Canadas first battle during the Second World War.

Records didn't identify soldiers as Mtis at the time

Urban Vermette, pictured 10th from the left in the second row, was one of the Indigenous soldiers interned in a Japanese prisoner of war camp during the Second World War. (Veterans Affairs Canada)

Pamela Poitras Heinrichs hopes the effortsto identify more Indigenous soldiers who were killed in action or captured as prisoners of war during the Battle of Hong Kong will serve as a reminder of the sacrifices made by First Nations, Inuit, and Mtis who contributed toCanada's armed forces.

As a member of the Hong Kong Veterans Commemorative Association (HKVCA),she has worked with volunteers for the past year identifyingIndigenous veterans who fought in Canada's first battle during the Second World War.

"By doing this project, we're giving those men and their families a space to stand up and say 'I am a proud Mtis. I am a proud Cree. I am a proud Anishinaabe,'" said Poitras Heinrichs.

"I think that's important for our ancestors and for our families now."

Working withthe St. Boniface Historical Society to go through the list of Winnipeg Grenadiers, upwards of150 Indigenous soldiers have been identified to date. Elevenfamilies also reached out to the association following a story published by CBC News last yearaboutUrban Vermette, one of the Mtis veterans.

With permission from their families, 30 of the veterans are listed on the HKVCA website. Among them is Poitras Heinrichs's father Ferdinand (Fred) Poitras, a Mtis veteran from St. Vital, Man., and a private in the 1st Battalion of the Winnipeg Grenadiers.

At 19, he enlisted when the Second World War was declared in September1939.The Grenadiers were first sent to Jamaica for 14 months, for garrison duty. When they returned, Poitras was among the 1,975 troops known as "C" Force when the Winnipeg Grenadiers and the Royal Rifles of Canada out of Quebec City were deployed to Hong Kong in 1941 to reinforce the British colony.

It was the first place Canada engaged in a battle during the war.On Dec. 8, 1941, Japanese forces invadedand overran Hong Kong's defences in 17 days.

Poitras was among those captured on Christmas Day and was interned as prisoner of war for four years, enduring brutal conditions, starvation, and forced labour in coal mines.

Ferdinand W. Poitras as a POW in about 1943 (right), and a photo of him taken in late 1945, a few months after his return to Canada. (Submitted by Pamela Poitras Heinrichs)

He didn't speak much about his experience as a prisoner of war but once told his daughter about how the Japanese guards made him stand for hours with arms outstretched holding pails of water. He also suffered diseases like beriberi, pellagra, and malaria.

"He was a very sort of understated person," said Poitras Heinrichs.

"I read an interview that was done with him at one point he said something about, well, it wasn't bad as long as you could avoid getting beat up."

Poitras returned to Winnipegin the fall of 1945 after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki forced Japan's surrender and ended the war in the Pacific.

Mtis military contributions

According to Veterans Affairs Canada, over 3,000 First Nations people joined the military by the end of the Second World War. There were an unknown number of Mtis, Inuit and other Indigenous recruits who served in uniform.

Shawn Nault, the minister for veterans at the Manitoba Mtis Federation (MMF), said it's a daunting task that the association has taken on to identify Mtis soldiers.

"It is phenomenal that they are able to pull up these archives and be able to recognize these soldiers that need the respect to be brought back to them because for so long they were long forgotten," said Nault.

One of the challenges is that there was no formal identification on government records for Mtis soldiers and there are few records.

"Back in that day, there were not very many people that self-identified as Mtis," said Nault.

"You were either lumped under First Nations if your skin was dark or you were considered just a white soldier."

290 killed in action

Julie Carver's great-uncle Robert Blanchard among the 290 soldiers who were killed in action during the battle. He was 27when he was killed on Dec.23, 1941, two days before Allied troops surrendered.

Blanchard's mother was Mtis (Red River) and Anishinaabe (Sagkeeng First Nation).

This is the only photo Julie Carver has of her great-uncle Robert Blanchard. (Submitted by Julie Carver)

According to his 121-page military file, his mother was unaware that he had left for Hong Kong until she received a letter from him on his way there. His death wasn't confirmed to her until a year after he had been killed, and his exact date of death was confirmed to her four years later.

"When I first found out about my great uncle a couple years ago, it was right around this time and it was very emotional reading through that military file," said Carver.

"I can't imagine what these veterans went through These veterans definitely deserve to be recognized on this special day."

Carver didn't grow up around the Indigenous side of the family, but undertook extensive research into her ancestry and found out about Blanchard's death. She's since been reconnecting to her Mtis and Anishinaabe identity and family.

Blanchard is buried at the Sai Wan War Cemetery in Hong Kong and Carver hopes that one day she'll get to visit his gravesite.

Richard Blanchard is buried at the Sai Wan War Cemetery in Hong Kong. (Hong Kong Veterans Commemorative Association)

Poitras Heinrichs said Carver's situation is not uncommon among the families that the association has been in contact with.

"In addition to giving our veterans this recognition now and being able to say who they are with pride, it's bringing families together," said Poitras Heinrichs.

"It's helping families find their history."