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As three more fallen soldiers returned home
on Sunday evening, more people are showing their support for the families by
going to bridges along Highway 401 with Canadian flags.
Sgt. Christos Karigiannis, Cpl. Stephen Bouzane and Pte. Joel Wiebe, members of
the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry based in Edmonton
were killed on June 20 when their vehicle struck a improvised explosive device.
After the repatriation service at CFB Trenton on Sunday evening the procession
of three hearses and limousines carrying family members proceeded on Highway 401
to Toronto.
Along the way, bridges starting from Northumberland County were filled with
hundreds of people wanting to reach out to families to let them know they are
not alone during their time of grief and support the soldiers.
Every fire department (Brighton, Cramahe Township, Alnwick/Haldimand Township,
Baltimore, Cobourg, Port Hope) along Highway 401 in Northumberland County had
bridges covered. Some of the fire department had every bridge in their area
covered with at least one emergency vehicle.
Northumberland County Paramedics, Northumberland OPP, Cobourg and Port Hope
Police were also on bridges, and on ramps, saluting the procession as it went
by.
At each bridge as the procession approaches, leading police vehicles in the
procession turn on their siren.
Close to 200 people lined one bridge in Port Hope.
It was the first time that Denise Sheehan, her daughter Megan (age 3) and
Patrick Moore (age 9) attended the overpass.
"They took their time to go fight for us, so I think we should take our time to
come show our respect for them," said Ms. Sheehan.
Peggy Swift was at the bridge in Port Hope for the first time on Sunday evening.
What drove her to come to the bridge is how mad she was at the city of Toronto
wanting to take the ribbons off of the emergency vehicles.
Breaking down with emotion, she said, "I just feel so bad for the parents who
lose their children. I support what they’re (the troops) are doing and I want to
show it."
Gary Ford has been many times to the bridge as the procession goes by.
"It’s quite a feeling. I don’t know how to describe it seeing (the family
members) waving their hands out the window."
He said he hopes what people do on bridges means something to the family, but
he’ll continue to go to bridges because, "it’s the right thing to do."
This is the original
article for those of you that has asked. It was published on July 13,
2007.
What began quietly,
spontaneously in Northumberland County has now extended along the 172 kilometres,
or 107 miles, of Highway 401 travelled by repatriated Canadian soldiers killed
in Afghanistan. People standing on bridges has become a powerful expression of
support by fellow Canadians for the troops and their families.
We all pray there will be no need to come together again on a bridge to honour
our fallen but, with the war in Afghanistan continuing, it’s naive to think
there won’t be more casualties.
Starting from the first procession for Sgt. Marc D. Leger, Cpl. Ainsworth Dyer,
Pte. Richard Green, and Pte. Nathan Smith, who were killed in April, 2002,
people have stood on bridges in Northumberland County.
I remember in 2002 there were approximately 30 people, including two police
officers, saluting on the Cranberry Road overpass in Port Hope as four hearses
passed underneath. People had been watching the live coverage of the
repatriation service at CFB Trenton on television and saw the hearses leave the
base. Wanting to show their support, they spontaneously went to the bridge to
await the procession.
Once a funeral procession leaves CFB Trenton, it heads west along Highway 401 to
Toronto, then goes south on the Don Valley Parkway, ending at the Centre for
Forensic Sciences on Grenville Street.
To date, 66 fallen heroes have made the journey. (As of Aug. 23, the number is
now 69 fatalities).
Since then, on various bridges along the Highway 401 route, there have been
people on bridges, sometimes less and, of late, more — many more.
Every person who stands on a bridge will tell you it’s a feeling like no other.
As you wait, you talk with people who have been there before, who you’ve come to
know. People smile, share feelings, talk about how many times they’ve stood on
various bridges. It’s a mix of pride and sadness.
When the convoy of vehicles is seen approaching, murmurs in the crowd can be
heard: “Here they come.” There’s silence as people get ready. Then, there’s a
sudden sea of arms waving Canadian flags, wanting to let family members in the
procession know we are there for them, that we share their pain and are proud to
be Canadian.
It’s not unusual to see a soldier’s hand waving a beret from a hearse, or a
family member waving from a limousine, to acknowledge the people on the bridge.
Those waves are simple gestures, but more than enough for everyone on a bridge
to know in that split second that everyone has made a connection to the people
in those vehicles.
Five years after the first procession went through Northumberland County,
hundreds of people — farmers, business people, firefighters, paramedics, police
officers, Legion members,kids — pay tribute to the husbands, fathers, brothers,
sisters, sons and daughters who have given their lives for their country.
People have lined bridges on cold winter evenings, rainy nights and evenings
when the sun is setting. People have stood for hours waiting on the bridges with
their flags, with their homemade signs, some with red Support The Troops shirts.
Everyone by now knows someone, or someone with a relation, who has been or is in
Afghanistan.
Canadians are not trying to conquer a country. They are trying to help the
people of Afghanistan. Talking to soldiers, they say we are there for the right
reasons. Soldiers give first-hand accounts of the good Canada is doing.
And, out of tragic times come good things.
In the June 25, 2007 Toronto Sun, columnist Joe Warmington described people
standing on Highway 401 bridges from Trenton to Toronto as a “Highway of Heroes”
phenomena. Since then, the title has taken on a life of its own.
On July 10, I received an e-mail from Cramahe Township volunteer firefighter Ken
Awender. Like so many, he said how beautiful it is that scores of people come
out to pay tribute. Then he said something that was so simple, I wondered why it
hadn’t been thought of before.
He suggested a petition should be started to rename the stretch of Highway 401
from Trenton to Toronto as “The Highway of Heroes.”
He’s right.
The section of highway is 172 kilometres/107 miles long. Already unofficially
known as the Highway of Heroes, it’s time we find a way to make it official.
It would be a fitting tribute to all the people who stand on the bridges, for
all the families who have lost loved ones.
Most of all, it will honour our soldiers who die so others can live a better
life.
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