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Tribute to troops stands alone
The Ottawa Sun ^ | Sun, May 20, 2007 | EARL MCRAE

Posted on 05/22/2007 6:29:40 PM PDT by fanfan

TWEED -- Entering this small town on my way back to Ottawa from Toronto, I unexpectedly saw it -- white and sparkling in the hot sun at the edge of the park, so special because it's the only one of its kind in all of Canada -- and I pulled over, parked, and got out.

I'd been listening on my car radio to the Senators/Sabres game and now, as I stood before The Guardian, I thought of one whose mother and father were here last week to pay tribute, Pte. Blake Williamson of Ottawa, and I thought of how he'd have been cheering on his Ottawa Senators, he who will never cheer again, he whose cheering came to an end, with his life, on the 14th day of October 2006.

"It's beautiful, isn't it?" I said to a couple behind me, staring in respectful silence at The Guardian, the monument to our soldiers who've been killed in Afghanistan. Al and Monica Dade, heading to Toronto where he's a martial arts instructor, saw it as well from the road, their curiosity kindled.

"Yes it is," said Monica Dade. "My best friend's nephew is a soldier in Afghanistan." Her eyes turned back to the monument. "She worries every day that he might be killed. He's just a kid."

The traffic roared by on Hwy. 37. "Garret," I heard a woman's voice call, "you see that? Korea. Your grandfather served there." She pointed to the engraved Korean War 1950-1953. Her name is Georgina Goulah. She is 72 and from Tweed. Vincent Goulah was her husband. A private with the Royal Canadian Mechanical Enginesubers.

CENOTAPH

Garret Goulah is 11 years old. It wasn't The Guardian he and his grandmother were standing before, but another monument near it: The cenotaph for the boys from town who fell in World War I, World War II, and Korea. During World War II, Tweed was a village of only a few hundred people. Of the 18 soldiers' names on the Tweed cenotaph who were killed in that war, three of them are Rashottes, three of them Thompsons, two of them Cassibos.

"Have there been any soldiers from Tweed killed in Afghanistan?" I asked Evan Morton.

His office is in a house not far from the park. He is the curator of the Tweed And Area Heritage Centre. "No," he said softly.

But for Paul Shier, that didn't matter. Paul Shier is a renowned sculptor who lives in town. One of his works, Thundering Silence, is displayed at the site of the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York. It pays homage to the many firefighters who died in the line of duty.

Shier wanted to honour another group of heroes, and the result is The Guardian, the six-foot-high marble sculpture of a baying wolf with the engraved words below it Lest We Forget and on a bronze plaque: This memorial is erected to honour Canada's soldiers who gave their lives in the service of peace in Afghanistan.

Shier donated his monument -- the only one in Canada for our dead in Afghanistan -- at no cost to Royal Canadian Legion Branch 428 of Tweed.

At its unveiling in the park, 500 children from town and area schools gathered along with dozens of local, provincial, and federal dignitaries and eight Silver Cross mothers and wives from across the nation. Scores of uniformed soldiers from Canadian Forces Base Petawawa marched proudly down the main street of town and the bands played and the townsfolk applauded.

The Guardian is the only such monument in Canada to our Afghanistan dead, right here in Tweed, and the tranquil little town has never known such honour and pride since a man named Elvis moved here in exile.

CHEERING VICTORY

"Elvis?" said Evan Morton, smiling. "Oh sure. He's still here. He's living in my basement."

As I drove into Ottawa, the Sabres-Sens war had ended. I heard the car horns honking, the cheering from balconies. I knew in Afghanistan before TV sets, young men and women would also be cheering the victory. The brave and the alive. In the war that matters.


TOPICS: Canada; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS:
LOL.

There is a old joke here that Elvis is still alive, and lives in Tweed, Ontario.

1 posted on 05/22/2007 6:29:41 PM PDT by fanfan
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To: GMMAC; Pikamax; Former Proud Canadian; Alberta's Child; headsonpikes; Ryle; albertabound; ...
Canada ping.

Please send me a FReepmail to get on or off this Canada ping list.

2 posted on 05/22/2007 6:30:53 PM PDT by fanfan ("We don't start fights my friends, but we finish them, and never leave until our work is done."PMSH)
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To: fanfan
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

From "For the Fallen" by Laurence Binyon

3 posted on 05/22/2007 9:33:50 PM PDT by Clive
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To: Alberta's Child; albertabound; AntiKev; backhoe; Byron_the_Aussie; Cannoneer No. 4; ...

-


4 posted on 05/22/2007 9:35:03 PM PDT by Clive
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To: All

NO PICTURE????? geeeez!


5 posted on 05/22/2007 10:43:54 PM PDT by jackibutterfly
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To: jackibutterfly

6 posted on 05/23/2007 4:12:12 AM PDT by Snowyman
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To: Snowyman

THANK YOU! : - )


7 posted on 06/04/2007 9:01:49 PM PDT by jackibutterfly
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