- Reaction score
- 4,269
- Points
- 1,260
I respect honouring of the fallen, but do we need another ritual to muddy the waters and dilute the public's education about such things?
It appears a new group - Wreaths Across Canada - has come up with a new way to honour the fallen - this from The Canadian Press:
This, from the organization's "About Us" page:
It appears a new group - Wreaths Across Canada - has come up with a new way to honour the fallen - this from The Canadian Press:
More from CTV.ca and Postmedia NewsA new organization wants to encourage Canadians to honour fallen troops by laying wreaths at military headstones across the country.
The inaugural event will take place .... at Beechwood National Cemetery in Ottawa, where approximately 2,700 soldiers are buried from the various wars the country has fought over the generations.
Gen. Walter Natynczyk, the country's chief of defence staff, is expected to be among the first to lay a real balsam fir wreath on one of the headstones.
Organizers are hoping ordinary Canadians will want to follow suit with their own similar tributes at cemeteries across the country.
They hope to remind families, especially those who've loved ones in the Afghan war, that their sacrifice are not forgotten during the holiday the season ....
This, from the organization's "About Us" page:
.... On December 4, 2011, Wreaths Across Canada will formally debut its mission by placing a wreath on the headstone of every veteran buried at the National Military Cemetery (NMC) at Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa. We will invite the public and encourage young Canadians to participate in this most personal act of remembrance. We are committed to repeating this gesture of remembrance annually in Ottawa, and our vision is to have this ceremony of commemoration spread to every military cemetery across Canada.
As part of our mission to teach Canadian youth the value of freedom, we are developing a program for students to be unveiled, hopefully, in 2012. The intent is to offer a modest prize for the student who best researches and reports on a topic related to veterans buried in the NMC. Local school boards are enthusiastic about our program and there is a growing interest from other organizations and associations.
All too often when the image of Canadian war dead comes to mind, we think of those buried overseas at places like Vimy, Normandy, Ortona, or Hong Kong. But over 250,000 veterans, many of whom fought in and survived those same battles, are now buried in military cemeteries throughout the nation. Veterans Affairs Canada alone is responsible for the maintenance of over 200,000 veterans’ graves in Canada and each year that figure grows as more graves are codified and added to their care. As well, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemeteries in Canada contains the remains of over 18,000 service men and women who died in Canada while serving during the two World Wars ....