Thousands gather in Vancouver to honour Canada’s veterans for Remembrance Day

Share:

Thousands gathered at ceremonies across British Columbia Monday to honour the service and sacrifice of Canadian veterans for Remembrance Day.

This year’s Remembrance Day marked 101 years since the signing of the armistice that ended the First World War, as well as the 75th anniversary of D-Day amid the Second World War.

The province’s largest ceremony took place at Victory Square in downtown Vancouver, where crowds spilled out onto Cambie and Hastings streets to help pay tribute at the cenotaph.

The service began at 10 a.m. with a performance by the Vancouver Bach Youth Choir and Sarabande, followed by a combined performance by Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services and the Regimental Pipes and Drums of the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada, who sang Canadian singer Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah.Two minutes of silence were held at 11 a.m., following a sounding of The Last Post. The 15th Field Artillery Regiment then performed a 21-gun salute at Portside Park.

Horn players sounded the Lament and Rouse, and the Royal Canadian Air Force performed a flyby as In Flanders Fields was sung by the Vancouver Bach Youth Choir and Sarabande.

Every year, a young person writes and performs a poem for Vancouver’s service. This year’s poem, A Phantom Pain, was read to the crowd by Cameron Elliot, a Grade 11 student at Vancouver’s Fraser Academy.

Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart laid a ceremonial wreath on behalf of the city, while Defence Minister and Vancouver South MP Harjit Sajjan laid one for the government of Canada.

Among the most affecting moments in the ceremony was the arrival of 99-year-old Paul DeLorme, a Metis man who served with the South Saskatchewan Regiment in the Second World War, who came to lay a long-stemmed white rose at the cenotaph to honour his fallen comrades.

As DeLorme — who was wounded in the 1942 Dieppe Raid and kept as a prisoner of war for three years — was introduced, the crowd spontaneously broke out into applause.

Another veteran Penny Sterling, who served as a sergeant in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, placed her own rose on the cenotaph as well.