Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Silent Crowd Marks Remembrance Day

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Nov, 2015 12:13 PM
  • Silent Crowd Marks Remembrance Day
OTTAWA — As the great bell in the nearby Peace Tower tolled 11, a solemn, two-minute silence fell over a crowd of thousands surrounding the National War Memorial for the annual Remembrance Day ceremony.
 
Stooped veterans, some wrapped in blankets against the November chill, joined serving members of the Forces and hundreds of ordinary Canadians who lined the sidewalks around the towering granite and bronze memorial under overcast skies.
 
The silence was broken by the skirl of a piper.
 
The traditional ritual opened with a bugler sounding the sad notes of the Last Post.
 
 
An artillery battery by the East Block of the Parliament Buildings boomed out a 21-gun salute.
 
The first crash of the guns startled a toddler in the crowd to tears, but the thundering noise stopped moments later and she stared, wide-eyed as a pair of CF-18 jets snarled overhead in a flypast.
 
A chaplain recited a long list of battles, from Vimy Ridge to Afghanistan, saying the names of the dead must never be forgotten.
 
 
Gov. Gen. David Johnston wore a naval officer's uniform as he placed a wreath at the memorial. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau walked bareheaded to place his tribute.
 
Johnston said he is deeply grateful for the sacrifices made by veterans.
 
"Serving others is never easy, particularly for those who serve in uniform," he said in a statement.
 
 
"These women and men risk their lives every day for ideals that we sometimes take for granted. But some things are worth the risk.
 
"Our freedoms are worth struggling for. Peace is worth striving for. Family and community are worth sacrificing for."
 
In a statement, Trudeau paid tribute to generations of sacrifice.
 
"Members of our Armed Forces — past and present — routinely put their lives on the line for our country," he said. "They represent the very best of what it means to be Canadian."
 
 
The ceremony included Sheila Anderson of Yellowknife, the Silver Cross mother representing all mothers who have lost children in military service.
 
She leaned on a cane as she placed her wreath.
 
Her son, Cpl. Jordan Anderson, was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan in July 2007.
 
A children's choir sang In Flanders Fields as dignitaries filed up to place wreaths against the memorial.
 
THOUSANDS LINE STREETS IN VANCOUVER TO PAY RESPECT FOR REMEMBRANCE DAY
 
VANCOUVER — Under crisp, clear skies in Vancouver, thousands of people lined the streets to mark Remembrance Day at Victory Square.
 
Alfred Wallace says he comes to the event every year to remember his grandfather who died in the Second World War and say a prayer for those who survived.
 
 
In reading the prayer of remembrance, Maj.-Rev. Jim Short recalled those who died at home and abroad, but also singled out those who have been wounded in war — in mind, body or spirit.
 
He offered special words of support to the loved ones of those who took their own lives in or after their military service.
 
Short also urged Canada to welcome with open arms people who are fleeing war and looking for a new home.
 
In a statement, Vancouver MP and Canada's new Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says while Nov. 11 is a time for historic reflection, it's also a time that resonates with military members and their families, for whom the burden of war is a very current reality.
 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Politicians Assaulted Decades Earlier Demand End Of Rape Culture

B.C. Politicians Assaulted Decades Earlier Demand End Of Rape Culture
Margo Wagner and Joan Sorley had been friends for years before they realized they'd both been raped.

B.C. Politicians Assaulted Decades Earlier Demand End Of Rape Culture

B.C. Bishop Says Abstinence Is The Only Healthy Choice Over Hpv Vaccine

B.C. Bishop Says Abstinence Is The Only Healthy Choice Over Hpv Vaccine
A Catholic bishop in British Columbia says a vaccine that protects girls against a sexually transmitted infection isn't inherently wrong, but abstinence is the only healthy choice.

B.C. Bishop Says Abstinence Is The Only Healthy Choice Over Hpv Vaccine

Guy Turcotte Trial Hears That He Admits To Causing Children's Deaths

Jurors at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial heard Thursday that he admitted to causing the deaths of his two children.

Guy Turcotte Trial Hears That He Admits To Causing Children's Deaths

Jewish Groups 'Astonished' That NDP Candidate Not Aware Of Auschwitz

Jewish Groups 'Astonished' That NDP Candidate Not Aware Of Auschwitz
Leaders in the Jewish community reacted with dismay on Thursday after it was revealed that Alex Johnstone, the NDP candidate in Hamilton, Ont., referred to fence posts at Auschwitz as being phallic on Facebook in 2008

Jewish Groups 'Astonished' That NDP Candidate Not Aware Of Auschwitz

RCMP File Terrorism Charges Against Man Believed To Be Fighting Overseas

RCMP File Terrorism Charges Against Man Believed To Be Fighting Overseas
Farah Mohamed Shirdon, 22, faces several offences, including participation in the activity of a terrorist group and instructing others to carry out terrorist activity.

RCMP File Terrorism Charges Against Man Believed To Be Fighting Overseas

Lodge Your Complaint: Some Winnipeg NHL Fans Upset With New Obstructed Views

Lodge Your Complaint: Some Winnipeg NHL Fans Upset With New Obstructed Views
WINNIPEG — Ron Wersch got a surprise when he walked up to his usual seat for the first NHL exhibition game in Winnipeg this season: a wall of Plexiglas and metal to his front and side that blocks his view of a good portion of the ice.

Lodge Your Complaint: Some Winnipeg NHL Fans Upset With New Obstructed Views