Ted Barris June 09, 2011

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.

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

Supporting those behind the troops

Last Saturday night, during a fundraising event at the McLaughlin Armoury, in Oshawa, I met the mother of Demetrios Diplaros. Her son, a 24-year-old private in the third battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment, was killed on Dec. 5, 2008, when the armoured vehicle in which he was travelling hit an improvised explosive device near Kandahar, Afghanistan. Mrs. Diplaros and I spoke for a few minutes during the event, but mostly I just looked sympathetically into her still hurting face. As our conversation wound up, she thanked me for listening.
“I don't know what I would have done without the support of friends and the military family,” she said, as she held on to me for dear life.
Pte. Diplaros was the 100th Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan since the Canadian operations - the war on terror - began there in 2002. But the statistics belie the toll on the living left behind. I learned an awful lot about that toll during the fundraiser (sponsored by the Kinsmen) on Saturday night. The function, which featured a day-long exhibit of a mural entitled “Portraits of Honour,” included a ride-in by more than 2,500 motorcyclists from across North America, a musical tribute to Canada's fallen, a silent auction and banquet at the armoury, and the unveiling of Dave Sopha's extraordinary painting. Its 50-foot-by-10-foot mural features the faces of 150 of Canada's war dead from the Afghanistan operation, including Demetrios Diplaros and the two other Canadians - W/O Robert Wilson and Cpl. Mark McLaren - who died in the same explosion that day.
“That's when it became too much,” Sopha told me during the fundraiser. “I began painting 16 hours a day, seven days a week. I felt a debt to each military member and to each of their families to make each portrait perfect.”
Since military and civilian groups have learned of my own interest in supporting soldiers' families - of both the recent past and the distant past - I've found myself saying, “Yes” to many, when asked to help out. So, last Saturday evening (two days prior to the 67th anniversary of D-Day) at the fundraising banquet I offered stories - verbal portraits of honour if you like - from June 6, 1944. But as well as telling stories, I listened to some. Not just those of Mrs. Diplaros. I also listened to Jacqueline DeBruin, on the board of directors of the Toronto Military Family Resource Centre (MFRC), the beneficiary of the “Portraits of Honour” fundraiser. Mrs. DeBruin, it turns out, had not only administered over the MFRC, she had also received its support.
“Both my husband James and I have been posted to Afghanistan (since 2004),” she told me. “And we've both received support during the separation when one of us was overseas.”
It turns out that since 2002 the military resource centre has offered such assistance as finding employment, getting packages sent overseas, providing video and telephone conference call lines to spouses each week, administering bereavement assistance and giving the spouse in Canada critical child care. Mrs. DeBruin claimed the MFRC had often been a lifesaver during those times when a tour of duty meant an 8,000-kilometre, year-long separation between her military husband and herself.
“Since this service began, dozens of years ago,” she said, “the military has recognized that deployment can be a real barrier to a spouse's effectiveness when there's a long separation.”
DeBruin told me that the 40 staff members at the Toronto MFRC, plus a back-up team of 450 volunteers, can provide assistance to as many as 2,000 military families on a rotating basis right across the Greater Toronto Area. In particular, she remembered when her husband was in Afghanistan. The couple had just been posted from Petawawa, Ont., to Toronto. And she was left with their baby boy. The centre provided what she called “respite care,” which gave her time and access to a public health nurse, a chance to drop off her son to get her shopping done, “and even to go for a manicure, for goodness’ sake.”
The connection between Kinsmen and wartime assistance, it turns out, goes back to the Second World War, when then Prime Minister Winston Churchill made an emotional plea on radio for milk to feed U.K. children. The Kinsmen's “Milk for Britain” campaign raised funds in Canada and shipped vast quantities of powdered milk to British children.
Toward the end of the “Portraits of Honour” evening, last Saturday, Todd Doyle, of the Kinsmen Club of Oshawa, announced that the day's event had accumulated $10,000. Doyle, artist Dave Sopha and all the MFRC volunteers were visibly moved by the gift. Even Mrs. Diplaros. I just wish I could have given her more than a hug of reassurance. Money and support, as valuable as they are, cannot replace her dead son.