I Remember
Je me souviens. I remember.
I remember my great-grandmother’s tears when she sent four
of her boys off to fight in the Great War. I remember her muted joy at seeing
three of them - including my grandfather Fred - return safe but never truly
sound; her son John – my father carries his name – fought valiantly during that
horrible spring of 1917 before he was left behind in the deadly quagmire that
was the first day of Passchendaele.
I remember my grandfather, who died when I was eight, never
talking about what happened in those trenches of death.
I remember English Sally, she who married a son of Pennan,
walking the length of the island from her family home in the great naval port
of Southampton to the north-east coast of Scotland, just to be with her man,
homeward bound from the Napoleonic Wars.
I remember Alexander Hendry of Aberdeenshire fighting for
his freedom at Culloden in 1746. Life for Alexander and the rest of the Scots
who fought with Bonnie Prince Charlie would never be the same.
I remember a newlywed Rozel straining to deliver her baby on
the very day her husband, an American loyal to the crown and kin to my
children, was fighting for Canada’s freedom alongside Isaac Brock at Queenston
Heights. The soldier would return safely to meet his son; his wife would not
see either ever again.
I remember my Great-Uncle Charlie, who left his wife behind
while he tried to earn a living in Malaysia’s rubber industry, struggling to
stay alive in a Japanese POW camp during World War II. Charlie, who served me
marmalade on toast when I visited him in Rotorua, New Zealand 44 years later,
risked his life to keep a diary as he toiled daily to rebuild the bridge over
the River Kwai while the good guys rained down a daily dose of death from above.
I remember a son of a former classmate losing his life in
Afghanistan; the shock when I read the news lingers with me still.
Passchendaele |
I remember my friend's Uncle Don, a Second World War navigator
who died in battle in the summer of 1944. Don passed on his name to his nephew
and his story to you.
I remember the 3rd Canadian Infantry and Pvt George Savage -
father to Jamie - braving an apocalypse of bombs and gunfire to land at Juno
Beach on D-Day 1944 to begin their push into Germany.
I remember other dads from the neighbourhood and their
efforts in that war. John Baschuk’s father and uncle both answered the call. Art Canfield - father of Bruce, Diane and Paul
- served with the Royal Regiment of Canada. Phil Hennessey - father of John -
got to meet General George S. Patton. Rick Skillater, a neighbour and a pilot
with the British Air Force, flew hundreds of missions into enemy territory.
I remember Tom McCaw - father to Janine - enjoying great
meals and an accommodation upgrade on a Canadian naval ship because crew
members were convinced he was King George VI in hiding.
I remember Frederick Wilmot - grandfather to Nicole - who
enlisted in 1941 and rose to the rank of Sergeant. I remember Ron McVicar, who
served in the same war on HMCS Cornwall. I remember Vic Shirreffs, my first
father-in-law, who served as a stoker in the Canadian Navy.
I remember William Findlay, great-grandfather of Amy and the
youngest Sergeant Major in the British Army, being awarded the Distinguished
Medal of Honour. I remember Royal Navy Seaman Stanley March, great-grandfather
of Josh, and I remember Bill Ryan, father of Dave, who fought with the Argyll
and Sutherland Highlanders.
I remember John Cossaboom, dad to Steve, and his RCEME
regiment in Korea.
I remember my friend Hago, who did two tours - the first in
Kosovo and the second in Afghanistan - and continues to serve to this day.
I remember the future pilots at the old Portage la Prairie
air base in Manitoba and the men and women from the local armoury who come out
to Karaoke at Stag's Head in Oshawa on Tuesday nights.
I remember the funeral of a young man related to me by
marriage who was just beginning his military career. The sound of the pipes as
they played Amazing Grace sent shivers up my spine.
I remember Vimy Ridge, the four-day battle in the spring of
1917 that marked - at a cost of 10,000 soldiers killed or wounded - a coming of
age for Canada as a nation, as well as the end of our innocence about wars and
the people who profit from them.
I remember the Remembrance Day service held a day early a
few years ago in downtown Brooklin for the benefit of the school children.
After being so many generations removed from war, it was important the kids
knew what their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents were fighting for
and that they would have a better understanding of what they were supposed to
remember.
I remember Remembrance services during COVID; muted and
masked just like they were more than a hundred years before during the last
pandemic.
I remember the services in Oshawa where tanks and other
military vehicles from the local tank museum would fill the streets prior to
the always sombre ceremony at Memorial Park.
I remember every soldier I have ever known and I remember
those who fought and died for my family and me and for our freedom, and for the
freedom that we all enjoy and too often take for granted. I remember the
families and friends of those soldiers and the tears that were shed for fallen
loved ones.
I remember the blood spilt by innocents, and I remember the
heartbreak of everyone affected by war.
I remember like it was yesterday the signing of the
Armistice to end the Great War. One hundred and six years ago today.
I remember. So I won’t ever forget.
This story was first published in 2013 and has been faithfully re-posted (with a few tweaks and additions each year) ever since. And now it graces the pages if INdurham if you want to search for it there
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