Description
Perry Campbell
Mr. Campbell was born on August 19, 1963, in Goose Bay, Labrador. After moving to a fishing village in Newfoundland at the age of 13, Mr. Campbell tried to make it as a fisherman but unfortunately suffered from sea sickness and went back to Labrador. One day he saw a Canadian Forces ad that stated, "No life like it." Captivated by this, Mr. Campbell applied and within four months he began travelling across Canada for his basic training. After three years as an infantryman, Mr. Campbell decided to become a military police officer. As a military police officer Mr. Campbell was always in the face of danger, but none so great as when he was called upon for duty in the former Yugoslavia with the UN Peacekeeping unit in the early 1990s. Here he was a master corporal, heading up the main investigative body for all armies, managing his own shift, and being responsible for the Jordanian Armies. Mr. Campbell spent nine years as a military police officer, and if called upon today for service would not hesitate to answer the call of duty for his country and undying dedication to the Canadian Forces. Mr. Campbell has spent the last ten years in Yellowknife with his wife and children.
Transcript
Everybody has expertise in every different areas, right. So like, to make it real basic, say for instance, I shine a deadly pair of shoes, like there was no one shined a pair of shoes like Private Campbell. And then nobody fold clothing like Wayne Alaby, who's a really good buddy of mine who, I just got married last year after twenty years he came to my wedding, like no one could fold like him. And then there was, you know there was Barnes who could, could make a bed. So what happened is that with all those resources, you used them and you draw everything ok. You say listen, you make my bed, I shine your shoes, you do my folding, I'll do your ironing. So then you create this teamanship just from your skills and everybody starts to come together. And another guy looks out and says, well these six guys are doing it, and then there's seven and then there's eight, you see what I'm saying? And all of a sudden you got twenty-nine, thirty people working together to accomplish one thing and that is when that drill Sergeant comes in, in the morning right? With that pay stick and you know screaming and yelling cause there's a lot of that going on believe me. You know, and you look up and say, "Ok, if we go down this morning, we go down as twenty-nine men not as one individual."