Home
Editorial
Columns
Contributions
Advertising
Photo Gallery
Back Issues
About Us/History
Contact
A longtime resident of Uxbridge, Ted Barris has written professionally for 40 years - for radio, television, magazines and newspapers. The "Barris Beat" column began in the 1950s when his father Alex wrote for the Globe and Mail. Ted continues the tradition of offering a positive view of his community. He has written 16 non-fiction books of Canadian history and teaches journalism at Centennial College in Toronto. |
  |
July 28, 2011
July 21, 2011
July 14, 2011
June 30, 2011
June 23, 2011
June 16, 2011
June 09, 2011
June 2, 2011
May 26, 2011
May 19, 2011
May 12, 2011
May 5, 2011
April 28, 2011
April 21, 2011
April 14, 2011
April 07, 2011
March 31, 2011
March 24, 2011
March 17, 2011
March 10, 2011
March 3, 2011
February 24, 2011
Feb 17, 2011
Feb 10, 2011
Feb 03, 2011
Jan 27, 2011
Jan 20, 2011
Jan 13, 2011
Jan 06, 2011
December 23, 2010
Dec 16, 2010
Dec 9, 2010
Dec 2, 2010
Nov 25, 2010
Nov 18, 2010
Nov 11, 2010
Nov 4, 2010
Oct 28, 2010
Sept 23, 2010
Sept 16, 2010
Sept 09, 2010
Sept 02, 2010
Aug 26, 2010
19, 2010
Aug 12, 2010
Aug 05, 2010
July 29, 2010
July 22, 2010
July 15, 2010
June 30, 2010
June 24, 2010
June 17, 2010
June 10, 2010
June 03, 2010
May 27, 2010
May 20, 2010
May 13, 2010
May 6, 2010
April 29, 2010
April 22, 2010
April 15, 2010
April 8, 2010
April 1, 2010
March 25, 2010
March 18, 2010
March 11, 2010
March 4, 2010
Feb 25, 2010
Feb 18, 2010
Feb 11, 2010
Feb 04, 2010
Jan 28, 2010
Jan 21, 2010
Jan 14, 2010
Jan 07, 2010
Dec 24, 2009
Dec 17, 2009
Dec 10, 2009
Dec 3, 2009
Nov 26, 2009
Nov 19, 2009
Nov 12, 2009
Nov 05, 2009
Oct 29, 2009
Oct 22, 2009
Oct 15, 2009
Oct 8, 2009
Oct 1, 2009
Sept 10, 2009
Sept 06, 2009
Aug 27, 2009
Aug 20, 2009
Aug 13, 2009
Aug 06, 2009
July 30, 2009
July 23, 2009
July 16, 2009
July 9, 2009
June 18, 2009
June 6, 2009
May 28, 2009
May 14, 2009
May 07, 2009
April 30, 2009
April 23, 2009
April 16, 2009
April 09, 2009
April 02, 2009
March 26, 2009
March 19, 2009
March 12, 2009
March 05, 2009
Feb 26, 2009
Feb 19, 2009
Feb 05, 2009
Jan 29, 2009
Jan 21, 2009
Jan 15, 2009
Jan 08, 2009
Dec 24 2008 |
Honoured company
I walked among heroes, last Wednesday morning - eighteen of them. Several had fought in the Second World War. At least one was a veteran of the Korean War. A number had helped keep the peace in the Middle East, Africa and the Asia. Several others had served Canada as reservists. Almost all were veterans from a theatre of war or world hotspot. But nearly all - after serving Canada in uniform - had accomplished something more that had caught the attention of the Minister of Veterans Affairs.
“After serving,” Minister Steven Blaney said at a recognition ceremony on July 27, “[these] veterans have continued to provide outstanding service to their country, communities and fellow veterans.”
About a decade ago, then Governor General Adrienne Clarkson authorized the creation of a Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation. It invited any minister of Veterans Affairs, each year, to recognize men and women, who, in addition to their armed forces service, had decided - once back in civilian life - to volunteer time and effort for other veterans.
There to receive his Commendation from the minister, last Wednesday, was Don Kerr, a veteran friend from Port Perry. Not only had he landed in Normandy on D-Day as a signals lieutenant, but he had also helped raise funds to create the Juno Beach Centre there, to ensure his comrades - living and dead - were commemorated. Then, in recent years, although retired as a businessman and politician, Don Kerr had extended that notion of remembering his comrades by preparing a Remembrance Day DVD and presentation for countless GTA schools and youth groups each Nov. 11.
“I didn't want any of those young people to forget what so many of my friends had died for, nor the freedom they had restored in Europe,” he said.
Not long after him, during the Commendation ceremony, the minister's assistant called out George MacDonell's name, another veteran friend of mine from Toronto. Even before Canadian troops faced an enemy in France in 1944, George MacDonell had served with the Royal Rifles of Canada in the defence of Hong Kong in 1941; he was captured and spent four years under horrendous conditions in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. A true survivor, instead of turning his back on the entire episode, the one time sergeant has written several books, made pilgrimages back to battle site and persisted in keeping the profile of his fellow Hong Kong veterans high.
“Theirs is a story … of how their spirit triumphed,” he wrote.
Not all the recipients of the minister's Commendation last Wednesday were veterans, however. Seated near me was a young woman, her younger brother and her parents. Dressed in the commemorative beret and green jacket of the Korea Veterans Association of Canada, HooJung Jones had an extraordinary tale to tell. Moved by the story of her Korean-born parents' survival of the Korean War, and by wartime experiences of the KVA vets she'd met across Canada, she decided to publish their accounts. What makes Canadians, Our Heroes so extraordinary is that in order to publish the book bilingually, HooJung had to hand craft prototypes of each Korean alphabet character so the book could be printed in Korean. As moved as we felt to witness her receipt of the minister's Commendation, she turned to me, during the ceremony, and said:
“I am inspired to be seated with you here today.”
For you see, I too was fortunate to be called forward at Wednesday's ceremony.
“Ted Barris is a recipient of the Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation,” the minister's assistant said. And then he read the citation.
About a month ago, Jayne, my wife, and I were travelling in Europe. In fact, we still had 30 members of our Eastern European tour in tow in Berlin. We were a couple of days from returning home to Uxbridge when we received the message from Veterans Affairs. It informed us of the program that recognized veterans for their service to other veterans, but it said on occasion the commendation also went to non-veterans.
“I am pleased to inform you that you were nominated and subsequently chosen … to be among this year's recipients,” VAC officer Lynn Jackson wrote. “Congratulations!”
It's difficult for me to describe what happened next. Jayne and I looked at each other. Neither of us spoke for quite a few seconds. We were so stunned, you could have knocked us over with a feather. For the next month, however, we were told, the award had to remain a secret. Not even close family could know. It was a bit nerve-racking and overpowering. But not nearly as overpowering as the ceremony itself - sitting with some of the people whose stories I had recorded, whose achievements I had admired, and whose service had always humbled me…
Suddenly I was in their company receiving the same honour. It's a feeling I shall cherish as long as I live.
|