By AMY SMITH Staff Reporter The Chronicle Herald Sun. Sep 21 - 5:41 AM
The president of the Waverley legion says there is no way military medals are going to be sold there today.
A posting on the Internet classified ad site kijiji.ca, called Military Medals for Sale, is promoting the sale of various medals, including Memorial Crosses and a First World War medal given to a black soldier.
"Remember this Sunday at Waverley Legion Militaria Show from 9 to 1," the ad says.
But legion president Jim MacLeod said he had no knowledge of such a sale and was going to contact the show’s organizer Saturday night to make sure it doesn’t go ahead.
"I am going to tell him it’s a no-no," Mr. MacLeod said in a telephone interview Saturday afternoon. "We’ve never had them before. That’s not what we’re there for."
Mr. MacLeod said he was very disappointed.
"I don’t see where they should be selling them," he said. "Somebody earned them, and then to find that (someone is) just flogging them all around. . . . There’s guys that don’t care, as long as they get their hands on them."
The advertised sale of the medals was spotted by Dave Thomson, an online military-medal hunter from St. George, Ont. He said he has been able to return 160 groups of medals to families, museums and other groups over the years, including 52 Memorial Crosses.
Mr. Thomson said it was "galling" that someone would try to sell medals in a legion and added that he’s had several calls and e-mails from people upset about it.
"It’s not sitting well with some of your fellow Nova Scotians," he said.
One of those people is MP Peter Stoffer (Sackville-Eastern Shore), veterans affairs critic for the New Democrats.
Mr. Stoffer, who has introduced a private member’s bill to ban the sale of military medals, said he thinks those who sell them for profit are "not what I would call the highest form of humanity."
"Those medals are given to people in act of courage and remembrance, especially for those who never got a change to wear theirs because they died, also (for) service, duty, honour," he said.
Andrew Moss, the show’s organizer, could not be reached for comment. A woman who answered the telephone at his home said he was travelling and wouldn’t be home until late Saturday.