Review: War

Nations at war, glorify war. Otherwise war would be untenable. Remembrance Day observances have seen the Royal B.C. Museum hand out helmets to 7-year olds and have them sit in a jeep. The Calgary Sun assigned a reporter to walk city streets shaming 9 in 10 passersby who failed to wear a poppy. Grade 10 students in Tillsonburg, Ont. were asked to jog through a ditch in a farmer’s field. CTV News Channel called it “a realistic experience about war.”

Canada in recent years was at war in Afghanistan, Libya and Syria. At the same time officialdom and media celebrated wartime exploit as a central fixture of the Canadian experience. This is factually dubious but worthy of thoughtful analysis. Professor Sherrill Grace, a professor of literature at the University of British Columbia, examines the phenomenon. The result is striking and poignant.

Take Vimy, a largely pointless 1917 battle that’s become the centerpiece of historical pageantry. Vimy did not win the war. Most soldiers who fought there were not Canadian-born but British expatriates. It was not even the most significant event of 1917. The year saw revolution in Russia, mutiny in the French army, U.S. entry into the war and unrestricted U-boat warfare that claimed shipping casualties at the rate of 10 vessels a day. Historian Leon Wolff in an account of 1917 dispensed with Vimy in two paragraphs.

“Vimy marked our coming of age because our troops fought together as Canadians, albeit under the command of the British Lieutenant-General Sir J.H.G. Byng,” Sherrill writes. “We won, or so the official story goes, although who exactly we were and precisely what was won were not widely scrutinized.”

Landscapes Of War & Memory documents a disturbing trend in Canada’s rituals of remembrance with symbolic observances of ancient battles that have grown proportionately as the number of eyewitnesses declined. Real veterans with real anecdotes make a poor backdrop for propaganda. When 17 Canadian veterans of the First War held their last reunion in France in 1998 not a single TV network ran live coverage. The Globe & Mail buried the story on page 12. When they held a remembrance ceremony at the Vimy Memorial in France in 1956 only two people showed up, a caretaker and an MP who happened to be passing through town.

By 2007, when all Vimy eyewitnesses were safely dead, CBC-TV produced a docudrama The Great War that saw Justin Trudeau play an officer with Princess Patricia’s Light Infantry, and assigned re-enactors to scramble up a Vimy landscape shouting, “Vive le Canada!” Sherrill expresses unease with such “pandering.” Whe writes: “I remain unconvinced that one battle can or should be given such status and become the time and place that our nation came of age or, indeed, that Canada’s myth of origins lies in the blood and loss – even the courage – of soldiers in war.”

Then-Prime Minister Robert Borden never thought so. “Canada got nothing out of the war except recognition,” he wrote. “The war is the suicide of civilization.”

Professor Sherrill examines this ritual of remembrance over a 30-year period, citing hundreds of Canadian poems and films, novels, memoirs and documentaries. “I am invited to legitimate the making of a myth that, as these kinds of narratives always do, leaves huge blanks in the landscape of memory,” she writes.

“If Canadians hope to understand who and where they are in this century, then an honest debate about the past is essential,” she writes. “If the works of art about either war tell us anything, it is this: we must work at remembering so we can create – and continue to create – a landscape of memory that sustains us, that is as alive, as complete, as powerfully informing, and as ongoing as possible.”

By Holly Doan

Landscapes of War & Memory: The Two World Wars in Canadian Literature and the Arts, 1977-2007, by Sherrill Grace; University of Alberta Press; 600 pages; ISBN 13978-17721-20004; $49.95

Inquiry Confirmed Spy Hunt

The China inquiry yesterday disclosed it is investigating names and dates referenced in a censored report on foreign espionage in Parliament. The Commission on Foreign Interference will “endeavour to shed light on the facts,” Commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue said in a statement: “Counsel have undertaken the exercise of identifying and analyzing the information.”

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Note From Blacklock’s Editor

Our counsel today will file notice of appeal in Blacklock’s Reporter v. Attorney General. We challenge a May 31 ruling by a federal judge. The outcome will determine the viability of independent media in our country.

In a first for any G7 nation, the Federal Court upheld a claim by lawyers representing Attorney General Arif Virani that federal managers may share passwords to Blacklock’s content without payment or permission, regardless of terms or conditions. Legal experts called the decision a “license for piracy” that will “create precedents” undermining an entire industry.

The Attorney General argued federal managers have a “public interest” in reading Blacklock’s without having to pay for it. We argue this is electronic shoplifting, unethical and wrong in law, a plain breach of property rights and the Copyright Act that has catastrophic consequences for digital media producers.

There will be a hearing. There will be intervenors. We will fight this to the finish – The Editor.

Taunts Singh To Face Election

Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre yesterday taunted New Democrats to dissolve the minority 44th Parliament and hold a fall election. Poilievre accused NDP leader Jagmeet Singh of prolonging the current session just to qualify for an MP’s pension: “Put the people ahead of your pension.”

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Migrant Labour Is No Model

Employers should not rely on migrant labour as a business model, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said yesterday. Cabinet is restoring 2014 regulations introduced by then-Employment Minister Jason Kenney that limit foreign workers to 10 percent of payroll: “If you as a business think you need more we have some real concerns about your business model.”

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EV Math Doesn’t Add: Report

The price of electric cars would have to plunge by a third to meet Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s sales mandate, the Budget Office said yesterday. Guilbeault has directed that electrics account for 60 percent of new passenger vehicle sales by the end of the decade: “The relative ownership cost of battery electric vehicles would need to decrease by 31 percent.”

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No Day In Court For Bernier

The Supreme Court yesterday brought an abrupt end to years of litigation against vaccine mandates. Judges declined to hear legal arguments from People’s Party leader Maxime Bernier and other plaintiffs who called the cabinet orders unconstitutional: ‘Canadians had a right to know whether the government acted lawfully.’

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Blacklock’s Looks Racist: MP

Blacklock’s coverage of alleged 2021 voting irregularities is stoking anti-Asian racism, says Liberal MP Leah Taylor Roy (Aurora-Oak Ridges, Ont.). The MP did not comment directly on a China inquiry affidavit alleging Communist Party agents were hired as poll workers in her riding: “I like all my colleagues take the issue of foreign interference extremely seriously.”

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Unaware Of Shocking Video

Police six years ago were unaware of a torture video allegedly linking a Canadian terror suspect to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc yesterday told the Commons public safety committee. “The existence of that video or the information you recounted to the committee now was not available,” said LeBlanc.

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Security Failure Angers MPs

MPs yesterday expressed anger and incredulity after officialdom defended security screening of two terror suspects. The Canada Border Services Agency said it was “concerned these two individuals got through” but defended its system as “robust.”

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Did It For Unions’ Own Good

Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon yesterday said his order forcing locked-out Teamster rail workers into binding arbitration was “in the best interests of millions of unionized workers.” Speaking at a union convention in Winnipeg, MacKinnon said he remains a friend of labour and considered his appointment as Minister “a fun job.”

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CN Pays $16M For Forest Fire

The British Columbia Court of Appeal yesterday upheld an order that Canadian National Railway pay $16.2 million for causing a 2015 forest fire. The province’s Wildfire Act allows damages against corporations found responsible: “CN admits as much.”

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“That Is Not A Fixer-Upper”

The Department of Foreign Affairs’ New York realtor yesterday testified an existing Park Avenue diplomatic residence was a wonderful penthouse that remains “move-in ready.” The department had cited a need for renovations as justification for buying a new $8.8 million Central Park condo for Consul Tom Clark: “It’s just very interesting to me that this residence was not good enough.”

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Mounties Supported Convoy

Supporters of the 2022 Freedom Convoy protest outside Parliament included current and former Mounties, says a newly-disclosed RCMP memo. The document said then-Commissioner Brenda Lucki tried to find Convoy sympathizers within the force: “Past and current members participated in or potentially supported the protests.”

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Covid Agency Admits Failure

Canada was “not as prepared as it could have been” for the pandemic, says a Public Health Agency report. The first-ever admission of failure followed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s boast that Canada was among the best prepared nations on earth: “The Public Health Agency was not as prepared as it could have been.”

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