Author Topic: Canada: 'What they did was noble': Soldiers who died in Afghanistan remembered at re-dedication of m  (Read 221 times)

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Offline TomSea

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'What they did was noble': Soldiers who died in Afghanistan remembered at re-dedication of memorial

'I was feeling the spirit of those fallen soldiers,' says Jim Davis, father of deceased Canadian soldier
Murray Brewster · CBC News · Posted: Aug 17, 2019


Faces of the fallen are shown on a screen during the re-dedication ceremony of the Kandahar cenotaph at National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa on Saturday, Aug. 17. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

It started as a simple two-tonne boulder, a nondescript hunk of rock plucked from the lonely Afghan wilderness and hung with a few plaques, but through almost a dozen years of war and heartbreak it has morphed into a major symbol of national sacrifice.

The cenotaph re-dedicated Saturday in a large public ceremony in Ottawa looks almost nothing like the original, humble soldier's monument first unveiled in 2003 by a grief-stricken combat engineer.

It is bigger, more elegant and — as was demonstrated last spring — exceedingly more powerful.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/afghan-cenotaph-dedication-again-1.5250149

Canadian AND American soldiers were remembered at this ceremony. One can be against us being in Afghanistan. As a matter of fact, a number of Nato countries have made sacrifices over there as well.   More pictures at link, I had to get those Royal Guard type uniforms into this. That's interesting that they do that in Canada.

What is a "Cenotaph"?
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cenotaph
[ˈsenəˌtaf]
NOUN

    a monument to someone buried elsewhere, especially one commemorating people who died in a war.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2019, 03:00:25 am by TomSea »