THE AFGHAN MISSION
GLOBE & MAIL
Hundreds of mourners attend soldier's funeral
IAN ELLIOT
The Canadian Press
May 2, 2009
KINGSTON, ONT. -- Both of Major Michelle Mendes's families - military and civilian - said goodbye to her yesterday.
Eight days after she was found dead in her living quarters at Kandahar Air Field, a death that is still under investigation by the military, Maj. Mendes's body was returned to this Eastern Ontario city for a funeral service at Sydenham Street United Church.
Only 30 years old, Maj. Mendes was one of the highest-ranking military members of the 118 Canadian Forces personnel to die in Afghanistan.
Hundreds of mourners, many military, packed the church to show their respects, a number openly weeping as the flag-draped casket was carried into the church by an honour guard from her Ottawa unit, the chief of defence intelligence.
Her parents, Ron and Dianne Knight, clung to each other as they watched the pallbearers remove the casket from the hearse.
As per military protocol, the honour guard carrying her casket was from her home unit, each one wearing the North Star insignia that denotes military intelligence, and a comrade from Afghanistan accompanied her body the entire trip still wearing his desert camouflage uniform.
Her sister Melissa delivered a moving eulogy for the young officer to the packed church.
"It breaks my heart that my little girls will never get to know you," she said, her voice cracking with emotion as she remembered the pair growing up on an apple farm near Grafton, Ont., and engaging in the usual sort of teenage rivalries with her sister before learning to appreciate one another as they grew older.
Her sister remembered how Maj. Mendes, known as "Mich" to her friends, thrived in the intellectual and athletic pressure cooker of Royal Military College and how she fell in love there with soccer coach Victor Mendes, whom she married after graduation.
She was immediately accepted by his family and the Portuguese community in Kingston, her sister recalled, and she said the death of the young officer had left a hole in the heart of those who knew her.
"She was so beautiful, inside and outside," Melissa said. "Maj. Michelle Mendes, we salute you."
Two of Maj. Mendes's classmates from RMC, Rebecca Barton and Amber Comisso, remembered her as an athletic overachiever, noting that she was the first person in the 2001 graduating class to achieve the rank of major, an appointment she earned just months before being posted to Afghanistan.
"We were so proud to have known her," Ms. Barton said. "Her beautiful, brilliant smile would light up any room she was in."
Her family has not spoken publicly since her death, but released a written statement yesterday thanking the public for their gestures of condolence.
"She was all Canadian - proud, strong and free," her family said.