Year: 2021

  • Syrian Refugee Family to be Reunited in Harriston

    By: Angelica Babiera, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, GuelphToday.com
    MINTO – Two Syrian brothers are finally reuniting after years of being separated from each other as the Minto Refugee Settlement Committee successfully sponsored another Syrian family to Harriston.
    Five years ago, Ahmad and Henan Almohamed and their family left a refugee camp in Turkey and arrived in Harriston after escaping the violence in their war-torn homeland. They were the first refugee family the committee ever sponsored.
    Now, it’s Ahmad’s brother, Obid Almohamed, and his family’s turn.
    Their application has been accepted and they are set to arrive on Nov. 23.
    “So, the application went through the Knox Calvin Presbyterian Church and it was sent to the United Nations or whoever is looking after bringing over refugees to Canada and we were approved,” said Terry Fisk, a committee member and the one responsible for the family’s immigration paperwork.
    He noted that Obid’s daughter has cerebral palsy and the committee and the church’s main point in the application was to get her to a place with better care than the care she’s been receiving at the refugee camp in Turkey.
    “They’re a big family; a family of seven. The kids range from four to 19 and I know that their main concern is to be able to give their children a brighter future and life than the one they currently have in Turkey,” said Terry.
    Fisk’s wife, Krista, who is also a realtor and a committee member, noted that she was able to get the family housing, which was their main concern due to the current housing crisis Canada is experiencing.
    “I just happened to be in the right place at the time,” said Krista.
    “A listing came up for sale that required immediate possession. Despite a little competition, a buyer was able to purchase the property with the intention of renting it to the Almohameds. It was like someone was looking out for us. The purchase process went smoothly despite a housing market that is very challenging to navigate.”
    Obid will be working alongside his brother Ahmad as a tiler for a local ceramics company.
    The two younger children are set to attend public school at Harriston.
    Meanwhile, the committee is trying to see if the three older children are able to attend the local high school.
    “We think two of them might be too old to go to high school but the third one might be able to, so we’re in the midst waiting to hear about that,” said committee chairman, Carrie Fayez.
    “They’ll be learning English as a second language, but that program is currently being held online and we’re waiting to see if any laptops and computers are going to be donated.”
    Fayez noted that the committee is working with local organizations for everyday supplies such as clothing, electronics, and furniture. She also expressed that monetary donations are always welcomed as this time around the government was unable to help the committee out with funding unlike last time.
    “Last time, we received funding from the government when we sponsored Ahmad and his family,” Fayez said.
    “They paid half the year and the committee paid the other half. But I’m not sure if that’s the same thing happening this year but we’ll try to help the newcomers any way we can. We just have not talked to the local and provincial governments for funding.”

  • Tamil Rights Group takes Fight for Justice to the International Criminal Court

    By: Laura Steiner/ Local Journalism Initiative
    The Tamil Rights Group (TRG) is seeking Justice for Eelam Tamils at the International Criminal Court (ICC).  The group, together with the Tamil Refugee Assistance Network (TRAN) has submitted an application requesting a preliminary investigation to crimes committed by Sri Lankan officials, including deportation, and persecution.
    The application is under article 15 of the Rome Statue in the International Criminal Court (ICC), which deals with aggression on a state level, including war crimes . “Twelve years have passed since the United Nations first started trying to hold Sri Lanka accountable for its gross violations of human rights, and international humanitarian laws,” Tamil Rights Spokesperson Katpana Nagendra said. The complaints date to the end of the 26-year long civil war. Approximately 25,000 people were internally displaced according to the United Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR).
    “The current regime has not only unilaterally withdrawn from the United Nations Human Rights (UNHC) Council Resolutions that the state itself co-sponsored in 2015, but President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has also publicly vowed to protect the armed forces from any domestic or international accountability measures,” Nagendra added. Their argument rests on a previous precedent where one country was party to the Rome statue while the other was not, and the ICC chose to investigate.   They’re arguing that the crime of deportation ends at the final destination.  Many Eelam Tamil refugees have fled to Australia, the United Kingdom and Canada, which are all countries that are party to the Rome Statue
    The Tamil Rights Group are being represented by David Matas, and Sarah Teich.  To learn about them, and the ongoing campaign please visit their website

  • A week in Photos

    By: Laura Steiner

    Cenotaph at a distance against the backdrop of a maple tree Photo credit: Laura Steiner/Milton Reporter

    Poppies scattered at the bottom of the cenotaph
    Image Credit: Laura Steiner/ Milton Reporter

    Optimist Club of Milton collected donations for the food drive outside Grace Anglican Church’s annual Yuletide Fayre
    Image Credit: Laura Steiner/ Milton Reporter

     
    Got some photos of your own from this past week? Tag us with them on Twitter and Facebook, and we’ll publish a selection
     

  • Search for Unmarked Graves at Mohawk Institute Brantford Begins

    By: By Colin Graf, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Windspeaker.com
    The search for children’s remains began this week on the grounds of Canada’s longest-running and largest residential school. Ground-penetrating radar is being used at the school known as the Mohawk Institute located at Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation in southern Ontario.
    Police and community members working in pairs are using the GPR machines in the area closest to the old school buildings this fall, with further work on the 500-acre site scheduled for next spring, said Rebecca Jamieson, president of Six Nations Polytechnic, at a recent news conference.
    Leading up to the search, school survivors helped community members and a recently established Survivors’ Secretariat to map the area and review archival records, she said.
    “For many this day has been long-awaited, but also brings with it a stark reminder of atrocities that were committed against our people in these institutions,” said Chief Mark B. Hill. “The coming months will definitely be difficult for Six Nations.” He said chief and councillors are focused on preparing the community for the results of the search and providing “mental health supports and crisis support to those who may need it,” he added.
    The central role of survivors in the work was described by Kimberly Murray, executive lead of the secretariat, an organization established this year to coordinate protocols and processes associated with investigations and to gather information to document and share the truth about what happened at the Mohawk Institute.
    Survivors are the ones who know about “the children who were here one day and gone the next,” Murray said. “Survivors are the ones who heard the whispered truths about where the children and the babies are buried,” she reminded those in attendance at the press event.
    The data from the search will be backed up and analyzed following best practices laid out by archaeologists, Murray detailed. During the winter months, more community members will be trained in operating the radar machines and final search plans will be prepared, she said.  The Mohawk Institute operated for 136 years, closing in 1970.
    Police were first involved in the work last July, said Six Nations Police Chief Darren Montour. That was when survivors gave him a letter stating they had suffered physical, sexual and mental abuse at the institute, called the “mush hole” by former attendees. They also “brought forward allegations of staff participation in the deaths of fellow students,” Montour said.
    His force requested help from the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) and the nearby Brantford, Ont. police service, leading to the establishment of a Joint Services Team to investigate the allegations, Montour added.
    The work, assisted and guided by the Survivors’ Secretariat, “will be a long and laborious investigation full of emotion and heart-breaking results,” he told the group. “We will find them (the children) and we will bring them home,” Montour proclaimed.
    The new team is already investigating its first case; the discovery of an unmarked burial “in the vicinity” of the former school in 2020, said Ontario’s Chief Coroner Dirk Huyer. The “painstaking” work of recovering the body is almost complete, and further investigation will be done, Huyer said.  The remains appear to be of an adolescent from 10 to 14 years of age, Huyer said, though gender and any other details are not known yet.
    The search is facing delays caused by the Ontario and federal governments, which are not allowing Six Nations access to all relevant records, according to Murray. She also voiced her concerns about records held by the Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (CTR).
    “It is of vital importance that the community take ownership” of the records, she said. “It does not help us if they are housed at the (CTR) if we cannot have access to them. It is “of no help” if further records are “sitting in the archives of Ontario” or “sitting in boxes in the office of the chief coroner or the Ministry of Indigenous Affairs (Ontario),” Murray declared.
    “No one can analyze and assess the records more quickly and accurately than the community,” she added, describing that members want access now.
    “They do not need, nor did they ask for, the government to review records on their behalf. The time has come for institutions to turn over all records to communities now,” Murray demanded. She chided governments, telling politicians there should be “no more hiding behind colonial laws… so you can buy time and have a sneak peak at what the records will show. There is simply no time for this nonsense and holding on to records. They must be released immediately.”
    Access to records was also emphasized by Chief Hill, who said he will continue to advocate for financial support and the release of records from government and other institutions.
    The CTR, located at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, collected about five million records related to Canadian residential schools. Only one million are available to the public, Murray said.
    Out of those, 500 relating to the Mohawk Institute are available and have been examined by the Survivors’ Secretariat to help identify children who died there, while more than 14,000 others have not been released, she said. Her organization is trying to negotiate an agreement for the records with the CTR, Murray said.
    Also missing from the public record is a “massive amount” of records in the Ontario archives, including death certificates and other documents related to hospitals and sanatoriums where children “were sent and never came back,” Murray explained.
    She said the Ontario government has delayed releasing 1,900 death certificates requested by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission eight years ago.
    “I wrote the letter myself” during her time working for the Commission, Murray said.  The province is only responding now, she stated.
    Chief Coroner Huyer was apologetic about his office’s past failures, telling survivors, community members and reporters that “it’s a horrible thing to recognize” that ”when we were involved with people being found or buried in different parts of the province” that coroners didn’t consider “the location being in the area of a residential school.”
    Huyer explained employees are now looking back at old files to determine if past deaths that were reported were in the area of residential schools. The coroner said he will work with survivors and communities “to understand the significance of those” deaths and determine if further investigation is needed.
    Windspeaker.com

  • Reel Asian International Film Festival Showcases York Region Directors

    By: Scarlett Liu, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter,  Economist & Sun
    The Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival is taking place starting from Nov. 10 to 19. The works of local filmmakers from York are showing at the festival.
    This year’s festival lineup consists of 81 films from all over the world. Newmarket-raised director Albert Shin has been invited to the festival with his moving short film, “Together.”
    The film is about two strangers who meet online and decide to meet in real life at a seaside motel for a suicide pact.
    Shin is known for his previous films “In Her Place” and “Disappearance at Clifton Hill.” The former received seven Canadian Screen Award nominations including Best Picture Director and Original Screenplay.
    While he was working on “In Her Place,” Shin had learned that Korea has one of the highest suicide rates out of all developed countries. He wanted to dig deeper into this issue, and that’s where the film “Together” came from.
    Born and raised in a Korean Canadian family, Shin’s parents were busy running a restaurant. He spent a lot of time at the video store next door and developed a keen interest in movies at an early age.
    “In the ’80s and ’90s, there weren’t many kids look like me; I grew up in a kind of white universe. In a lot ways, I tried to fit in, but inside my home is pretty much a Korean household,” Shin said, noting it felt like he was living in two different worlds. Without question, his Korean heritage has greatly influenced his films.
    “My point of view could be an interesting multination of my Korean heritage and Canadian background and hopefully bring good stories to the world.”
    This is also what the Reel Asian film festival is striving for. “Representation has always been at the forefront of our festival’s mandate,” stated Deanna Wong, executive director of Reel Asian. “How do we tell our stories? What is our connection to other communities? It’s not enough to put faces on the screen. We want to facilitate discussion and an understanding of the importance of storytelling.”
    Unsung Voices is a program featuring four fearless emerging filmmakers. This year marks the 10th edition of the filmmaking program. Ganesh Thave’s “The Orchid and the Tree” is included in this year’s Shorts programming.
    The story explores the relationship, the awkwardness and silence between an immigrant father and daughter after the mother passed away a long time ago.
    Thava is a Tamil Canadian writer and director, of the second generation of immigrants from Sri Lanka. His early childhood was tough because of language barriers. When he first moved to Markham, the only thing he could say in English was his name.
    “I used to be quiet and shy until I applied for a school play in high school. Even though it was a small role, I got up on the stage and everyone was listening to me, which was very exciting, and I knew I wanted to do acting after that moment.”
    However, a career in the entertainment industry didn’t sound like a smart choice to Thave’s parents. He had to majored marketing at Ryerson University and then worked in the advertising industry after graduation.
    In 2018, he started to take writing and acting courses and self-taught everything to chase his dream. “The Orchid and the Tree,” his very first film, is showcasing at the film festival.
    “It is nice that the Reel Asian film festival is featuring BIPOC films. I’m really appreciative that they are providing the space,” he said, adding that he feels very grateful, nervous and vulnerable, “because every aspect of the film was crafted and decided by me, which means what people are seeing is truly me — that’s scary.”

  • Veteran processes Afghanistan takeover by Taliban

    By: Marie Zettler, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Eganville Leader
    Cobden — When the Canadian Armed Forces left Afghanistan in 2014, they left behind what had been a 12-year commitment as part of a United States-led multinational coalition to overthrow the Taliban regime in the country. Over that time, more than 40,000 Canadians had served on the mission which cost 165 Canadian lives: 158 military and seven civilian. A further 2,000-plus were wounded.
    Defined in broad terms, the mission was understood to:

    • · Conduct combat operations to drive out insurgents and maintain security to create a secure environment for development and reconstruction.
    • Facilitate the delivery of  programs and projects that support national economic recovery and      rehabilitation.
    • Train members of the Afghan National Defence and      Security Forces (ANDSF) and senior officials in the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Defence to provide them with the tools necessary to sustain their own security.

    By the time the Canadian Forces withdrew from the mission, those serving there had seen, besides the devastation and tragedies, many signs of progress in moving the country and its inhabitants toward more freedom and opportunities. And so, it is with a sense of loss that the news was received that, in the run-up to the United States withdrawal from their presence in the country scheduled for August 31, Taliban fighters had taken control of the Afghan presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 15, 2021.
    Among the Canadian veterans of the Afghanistan conflict who are now still processing this turn of events is Robert Lauder, an Anglican priest who as Major the Reverend Lauder served a seven-month stint as leader of a seven-person team of chaplains from August 2006 to March 2007.
    “During that time,” says Rev. Lauder, “I shared in the sacrament of last rites over the bodies of 23 Canadian soldiers, most of whom I knew personally, and said goodbye to more than 200 friends who were medically repatriated.”
    There were approximately 2,600 Canadian personnel on the ground in Afghanistan at any given time. They were rotated every six months for 10 years. While conducting counter-insurgency operations, they were also engaged in sharing a new way of thinking with the Afghanistan National Police, who exercised the power of local warlords over people in their areas.
    “Traditionally they were nepotistic appointments of their relatives, wearing no uniforms and getting no pay. They would stop people at crossroads for money or anything else of value they had,” he said. “The idea of ‘To Serve and Protect’ was a radical concept when we arrived. Policing as a career with a uniform, a code of conduct, and regular pay was a fascinating development.”
    While they were attempting to fulfill their mandate, the soldiers had to function under the constant threat posed by the prevalent worldview of a society dominated by warlords who acted on their interpretation of Islam.
    “We quickly learned to ignore burka-clad women at all times to avoid violence,” recalled Rev. Lauder. “In practical terms, women didn’t exist except for their husbands inside their houses where they bore and tended to their children.”
    However, the needs of unattached males had to be accommodated, and for that purpose young boys were used. The ramifications of this added to the stress already part of the soldiers’ combat experience and entered into the regular counselling sessions which were part of the chaplain’s role.
    “They would tell me how extremely troubled they were by hearing the screams of young boys being used on Thursday evenings,” he said. “We were told that Friday was the Muslim holy day, and that according to the ancient Pashtunwali (tribal law), which predated Islam by 300 years, it made sense.
    “Canadian soldiers were in terrible distress and would say. ‘What can we do?’ Passed up the chain of command, the word came down to do nothing. ‘We are not there to change their culture or local customs’.”
    During the scheduled “purple stole” times, when chaplains agreed that anything they would hear was in absolute confidence, members of the forces would line up 10 at a time to wait for their allotted 20 minutes with that chaplain.
    “For those minutes they would vomit their experiences into our laps, thank us for listening, and then move on to make way for the next in line,” he said. “All we could do was listen. It was the only place they could take the psychic energy they carried within from their experiences. But the ones I was really concerned about were the ones who didn’t seem to be struggling.”
    Meanwhile they were up against an indistinguishable enemy which was a gathering of people from various Islamic countries, indoctrinated to believe that members of NATO forces supporting the Hamad Karzai government were there to deny their faith, to destroy their mosques, and otherwise deprive them of their ability to practice Islam.
    “Almost all were high on opium or marijuana, which were cheap and easy to obtain,” said Rev. Lauder. “Afghanistan remains a major world source of these substances.”
    There was the matter of understanding the culture which motivated the insurgents and the society in which the events played out.
    “Our interpreters were paid and treated well to help us communicate and to understand social practices,” he recalled. “It was difficult. The good guys and the bad guys all looked the same. Quite often they were cousins of the people to whom we spoke on the street, who thanked us for being there.”
    A tradition with wide-eyed newcomers, overwhelmed by the heat and dust, was to invite them to “the fishing derby on Saturday at the lake.
    “New arrivals got excited about this bit of Canadiana in an arid land, until they realized we were referring to the sewage lagoon, the only open water anywhere, the smell of which wafted over Kandahar Airfield as a symbol of our life there.
    “The fishing was poor.”
    Daily Horror
    The daily horror continued, with improvised explosive devices (IEDs) a constant threat. Chaplains are forbidden from carrying weapons; nevertheless, Major Lauder frequently accompanied the soldiers to the front lines in solidarity with them.
    “We were there to help them cope; to survive, to make sense out of senselessness.”
    He was told by an interpreter that even the enemy valued the role of the chaplain.
    “We were told that there was a bounty of $10,000 for any fighter who killed a Canadian soldier,” he said. “The bounty for a chaplain was $20,000. This was a huge amount in Afghan culture. They must have thought that ‘Canadian Imams’ were good for the morale of the soldiers.
    “I knew I was doing the job well when we heard that gunsights were training on us, but it raised the level of anxiety.”
    There was no way of knowing when an interaction would turn deadly.
    “There were CF married couples serving in the same theater of conflict, which seemed unfortunate to me,” said Rev. Lauder. “One Canadian soldier was killed in an explosion. We had to notify his wife, who was on duty about a mile away. It did not go well. If our opponents were trying to reduce our fighting effectiveness, it worked that day. The body of the soldier was escorted home by a close friend, as was our custom, and by his CF wife and her close friend.”
    However, troops found ways to lighten the ever-present feeling of threat.
    “I visited one soldier in our Role 3 surgical hospital with a badly-swollen leg,” he recalled. “Asking what had brought him there, he said, ‘Snakebite by a viper.’ I inquired how he knew it was a viper, so he reached under the bed and drew out a lifeless, headless viper. ‘Where’s the head?’ ‘I bit it off.’ We laughed together so hard that he almost fell off his cot. The mood was briefly lighter and he recovered.”
    In November of 2006, Major Lauder shared an excerpt from his personal diary with The Anglican Journal, the magazine of his denomination, recording a day in his life in Afghanistan.
    After describing the heat and the dust-covered landscape where “everything is tan wherever one looks” he went on to explain:
    Kandahar is the operational home of Task Force Afghanistan, 2,200 Canadian soldiers and 10,000 others charged with facilitating the three D’s of Canadian foreign policy: defence, diplomacy and development. But those last two are hard to achieve when insurgent forces are doing their best to kill those who want to see it happen. We are the target of terrorists dedicated to shooting or blowing us up by any number of creative means. Yet farmers just want to grow food and are threatened with death by warlords who want them to grow endless fields of opium poppies. Children, keen and hungry to learn, watch their rebuilt school being burned again by insurgents.
    I visit an orphanage. The 21 girls, ages 3 months to 15 years, come from various tribal backgrounds. Overcoming their shyness, they treat me with such loving acceptance that my heart fills with joy. It reminds me of why we are here and gives me real faces to recall in the months to come. I will fight for these children. The Afghan government has asked the world for help and we are part of the Canadian government’s response.
    He sings Matins, a morning prayer service in Fraise Chapel, a multi-national sacred space “made of plywood and love.” Then his phone rings.
    A suicide bomber has hit Canadian troops again. Four dead and 17 wounded. We go to the field surgical hospital to await casualties, silently whispering prayers for whoever is to come. The Black Hawks (helicopters) begin to touch down, and the stretchers are rushed into the triage area.
    Thick bandages soaked with blood do not always stop the dripping through the stretchers onto the floor. It was not the blast that hurt these soldiers – it was the ball bearings, nails and shards of metal strapped around the explosive belt that made a circle of hot destruction for 50 metres. Pieces of victims and dirt coat the desert tans of the wounded. They suffer shrapnel injuries and some are severe. The medical team makes fast, professional assessments and begins treatment. We lift stretchers, we hold the hands of soldiers as they squeeze our fingers and cry out in pain, grief and fear. We lift them for X-rays and help turn their torn bodies for treatment, praying aloud with those who wish it, and silently for all. We report to concerned friends how their buddies are doing. Later, we will help many contact loved ones at home, but not before they have had a chance to tell us their story first. It is too raw to be spoken to family and friends unmetabolized. They thank us for this. Chaplains are keepers of the story. We hold their experience in our hands and cherish it. Tears come freely and often.
    Mortuary Affairs calls. They are ready for us. The remains of the dead are not disturbed for confirmation of identification until the chaplain says final prayers – last rites. Not knowing anyone’s identity for certain, I pray from my prayer book for all and bless each body in turn. God knows his own and will understand. We send them to Him for ultimate healing. The people waiting to do their job stand silently with bowed heads, and I am reminded once again that there are no atheists in foxholes. Many shake my hand in silent thanks, and our eyes meet meaningfully. This was important. Now their job begins. 
    A window into the day-to-day life of those deployed on the Afghanistan mission, and of the experiences which caused many to be traumatized to the point where they could no longer function in the combat theatre and were sent home. To help them cope, and to transition to non-combat life, there was a four-day process at a decompression centre in Cyprus.
    “The theory was that there was a chance to talk to medical doctors, recover and re-engage with “normal” civilian life. While it was helpful, it was not enough.
    After the decompression period, they came home, many unable to disengage from the events that had resulted in their medical discharge, “to a spouse and kids who had no understanding of their experiences. Spouses often wondered who the profoundly-changed guy or girl was in their house.”
    And now, the return of the Taliban to power has seemingly reversed the hard-won gains resulting from the sacrifices of so many soldiers and their families.
    Resurgence Inevitable
    Rev. Lauder says the US troop withdrawal this past August which emboldened the Taliban takeover was “inevitable.”
    “There was no way the US would keep its forces there forever,” he said. “Since the days of Alexander the Great around 300 BC, would-be conquerors were stopped by Afghan fighters, who would simply retreat to the hills and wait for the latest conqueror to leave.
    “We did what we could when we could. It was unwinnable. We can’t change people; we can only walk with them as they go their own way. Yes, at first there was a great sense of futility. But just as with conflicts of all times, it’s only the change within ourselves that make any difference.”
    He continues to be sustained by numerous “little lights” from his experiences in Afghanistan.
    “There was a boy who told me his older sister had been able to attend school for the first time and she was hoping to become a lawyer. There was a man who told me he was now growing flowers. Never before had he been able to grow flowers. If he had grown anything other than opium or marijuana, the warlords would have killed him and his wife and children, he said. We were able to plant seeds of hope that people could become something other than they were. A whole generation grew up with the possibility of something bigger and better. Maybe some will become teachers and lawyers. We will find out. But, for 20 years, they had a chance to breathe.”
    On his return to Canada, Major Lauder was posted to a small army depot in Toronto where he served far from the battlefields of Afghanistan and even more distanced from anyone who would understand the toll the experience had taken on him.
    Posted to Toronto immediately upon return from AFG roto 03-06, he rode the subway north to Denison Armoury in Downsview daily. Reporting in on his first day, he didn’t get halfway through the parking lot before being physically accosted by four young men, calling out and beating him with their fists.
    “I was thinking, ‘Welcome to Toronto’,”, he said. “Then they started to laugh, asking if I remembered them. It turns out that they were four reservists from a Toronto regiment, seconded to 1RCR for roto 03-06. Knowing how hard it is to be inserted into a formed unit, I had sat with them one-on-one through a long night of sentry duty behind a heavy machine gun in a foxhole at Masum Ghar, a vulnerable forward position where the threat was real. I said little as each stood their watch telling the chaplain their troubles and concerns before the long night turned into dawn. ‘Padre, you were a God-send that night. We don’t think we would have made it through the deployment if you hadn’t risked your own life that night. Most senior officers come forward, stay low, get their picture taken, and depart by helicopter. You sat through the night with us in our hole when you didn’t have to. We figured, if you can do it, we can do it.’
    “It was not what I said, for I said little,” he recalled. “It was a ministry of presence. These soldiers were truly appreciative.”
    Rev. Lauder continued to process his experiences. After two years he requested psychotherapy and ultimately was declared medically unfit to continue as a member of the military. After his medical discharge he retired to Petawawa where he started a small financial service business which he continues to operate.
    His heart, however, is never far from his one-time comrades, and, with a Harley as his favourite mode of transportation, he serves as chaplain to two Wounded Warriors motorcycle clubs. While he fills in for Sunday worship vacancies in churches in the Anglican Parish of the Valley, he says “his church” is now the Wounded Warrior groups with which he meets twice weekly.
    “We laugh, we cry, we ride our Harley’s and sometimes we get better,” he said.
    The 65-year-old father and grandfather now resides in the Cobden area.
    He is the current president of the Kiwanis Club in Pembroke and is looking forward to singing in the Pembroke Community Choir once again when COVID-19 measures permit.
    “But my principal outreach is to the Wounded Warrior community,” he said.
    He acknowledges the catch-all term for trauma injuries, PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) is somewhat clichéd.
    “We all endure trauma,” he said. “What will we do with it? How does one make sense out of chaos? I don’t want to hang on to a sense of futility. I want to move on to things that have meaning and purpose. If we see the bigger picture, we can make better choices.
    “I want to remain useful,” he added. “My role as a pastoral counsellor is to find the gift within the hurt. You can’t walk down anyone else’s path any farther than you have walked yourself. People who knew me before Afghanistan say that I am much more helpful to them now.
    “We only grow when it hurts. Pain breeds change. It’s all good, if we can just figure out what it means.”

  • Oldest living veteran in Canada honoured at 110 years old

    If you ask Reuben Sinclair what the key is to a long and rewarding life, the 110-year old won’t shy away from sharing some words of wisdom.
    Never worry, he said to a crowd of fellow servicemen and reporters moments before he was honoured at a Remembrance Day ceremony inside a Vancouver elementary school on Wednesday.
    If you have a problem, fix it. And that goes a long way, he said.
    Sinclair is the oldest living veteran in Canada, having served during the Second World War for three years in the Royal Canadian Air Force. His age also makes him one of the oldest living men in the country.
    I always found time to help people who were less fortunate, and I think that’s one of the reasons the good lord keeps me around, he said laughing.
    After laying a wreath at Talmud Torah Elementary school, Sinclair was awarded service medals by the Royal Canadian Legion — the latest in a long list of accolades he’s received over his lifetime.
    His daughter, Nadine Lipetz, said she was proud the children have a chance to meet a veteran who has a story to tell, and hopefully they can learn from it.
    Sinclair was born on a farm in Lipton, Sask. His birth certificate reads that he was born on Dec. 5, 1911 — but his family says he was actually born months earlier.
    His older brothers told him he was born in the summer of 1911, said Lipetz. We think it was the registration date that we’ve used as his birthday, but in effect he’s really 110.
    Sinclair worked a number of different jobs during the Great Depression before enrolling in an accounting course. He was hired by the Treasury Department, where he worked until the Second World War.
    Lipetz says her father said he couldn’t stand by and do nothing while people were dying in Europe.
    He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force at 31, but he was diagnosed with flat feet which kept him from serving overseas, Lipetz said.
    Instead, he served as a wireless operator mechanic in Montreal, Vancouver, and North Battleford, Sask., running transmitters that were used to train pilots to take off and land on blacked-out runways. The program prepared pilots to fly in the night skies of Europe.
    When the war ended, he settled in Metro Vancouver, where he opened a garage and wrecking yard with his brother.
    In the ’60s, he moved to California with his wife Ida. The pair returned B.C. in 1994, before she passed away just a couple of years later.
    Sinclair still lives inside his Richmond condo, where he receives support from caregivers.
    He spends much of his time reminiscing about years past, including his time in the war. Lipetz says he’s happy to see more of his family members after being separated from many of them during the pandemic.
    Visits from the family and friends are very big for him, she said. He’s happy and enjoys every day.
    Over the years, Sinclair’s family has grown to include six grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and a great-great-grandchild.
    A second great-great-grandchild is on the way.
    We feel blessed that every day is a gift, she said.
    Jon Hernandez  · CBC News
  • Town of Milton Showcases Milton Streets named for Veterans

    By: Laura Steiner
    The Town of Milton has launched a new feature showcasing local streets named after a veteran just in time for Remembrance Day.
    Open the “Discover Milton” webpage and find a map labelled Veteran street names.  The streets are highlighted in red.  Click one, and find out who it was named for as well as information about where they served, and when they enlisted.
    The Royal Canadian Legion is also hosting a traditional Remembrance Day Service at Evergreen Cemetery beginning at 10:45 a.m. tomorrow.  Attendance is limited due to COVID-19 precautions.
    The Town of Milton accepts submissions for naming streets.  Information on the application process can be found on their website.  Names are approved by council before being used.

  • Home buyers rush for mortgage pre-approvals amid mounting signs of rate hikes to come

    Canadians are scrambling to get mortgage pre-approvals and rate holds before the era of low interest rates comes to an end, as some economists predict.
    Real estate and mortgage brokers say their clients are increasingly seeking ways to hold on to current rates because many housing markets like Toronto are facing heated conditions making it hard to keep purchase prices down.
    It’s a seller’s market and you barely have the opportunity to put conditions (on a purchase) because there are 400,000 people waiting for their permanent residency, 200,000 of them are already here and there’s buyers lined up around the corners, said Estee Zacks, the Toronto-based owner of Strategic Mortgage Solutions Inc.
    They feel weak, and they are statistically, so they’re just trying to get a leg up as much as they can.

    Booming demand

    Zacks has noticed a recent surge in requests for rate holds, which freeze mortgage rates for up to 130 days.
    Mortgage rates vary across banks, but Ratehub.ca shows the country’s top five banks are offering five-year fixed mortgages for as low as 2.62 per cent and as high as 2.94 per cent.
    Three-year fixed mortgages range from 2.49 to 3.49 per cent, while five-year variable mortgages vary between 1.40 and 1.75 per cent.
    The interest rate, which also weighs on home buyers, has sat at 0.25 per cent since March 2020, but the Bank of Canada has hinted it could rise as the country continues to climb out of the pandemic and loosen restrictions.
    A rise in both mortgage and interest rates would end an almost two-year period of rock-bottom borrowing costs. However, the low rates haven’t done much to take the bite out of housing costs.
    The Canadian Real Estate Association said the national average home price was $686,650 in September (new window), up 13.9 per cent from $602,657 last year.
    In Toronto, it was even higher. The Toronto Real Estate Board said the average price of a home sold soared by almost 20 per cent to nearly $1.2 million in October, up from $968,535 in the same month last year.
    Rates hikes will make those purchases even more costly.

    Tiny hikes add up fast

    A one per cent increase in mortgage rates from current levels will cost an average new buyer $230 or 12 per cent more in additional monthly interest payments, CIBC Capital Markets analyst Benjamin Tal wrote in a Nov. 4 note to investors.
    Potential buyers will face a higher interest payment trajectory, leading to reduced demand for new and existing units, potentially resulting in some slowing in the important construction industry, he wrote.
    Current variable rate holders might choose to keep their principal payments untouched and thus will absorb the full impact of higher rates — potentially at the expense of other spending.
    If rates stay elevated into 2025, he added the massive borrowing undertaken during the pandemic will feel the full bite of higher rates.
    Vancouver real estate broker Tirajeh Mazaheri said buyers have noticed this and are rushing to get pre-approved for a mortgage to extend any kind of relief they can.
    Many, she said, spent much of the pandemic closely watching housing prices and hoping they’d decrease, but have now accepted that likely won’t happen.
    People are scared and they are saying if interest rates go up, they’ll never be able to afford the city, she said.
    rates.
    BMO Capital Markets senior economist Robert Kavcic doesn’t think those people have long.
    He believes the Bank of Canada will likely hike its rates quicker and by more than most people expect, and he’s already seeing signs of rising mortgage rates.
    In a Nov. 3 note to investors he wrote, Mortgage rates are already creeping higher in the five-year fixed space, but those with contracts in hand probably have another month or two to buy something.
    Tara Deschamps · The Canadian Press ·