The biggest thing that has happened is that our history, our
military history, has not been taught. I don’t know about other
provinces but definitely in Ontario they haven’t taught the
history. About four or five years ago they started with grade
10. Now they’re covering from 1900 to the year 2000 in the
semester that they have. There’s a whole group of people from
about the early 60s up until the late 80s where it was a denial.
It was wrong to even talk about and basically ... I guess and I
can say this ... it probably goes back to the Trudeau era and so
on because of how he was involved and not involved. There’s
denial about it and the Vietnam War where there’s denial in the
States and people came up here.
The thing is that we have a very honourable and amazing military
history that Canadians basically tied in with Great Britain and
the Empire. We are very much a part of it and this is where my
father came from ... going back to the Boer War and the First
World War. The thing is, in the Second World War we only had 11
million 500 thousand people in Canada across this whole nation.
From 1939 to 1945; 1,082,000 served in – had served or were
serving in – the armed forces. Almost exactly 10% and with
distinction and this is what we did in the First World War; it
was the Canadians that took Vimy Ridge. The French tried to, the
British tried and the Canadians did!
In South Africa, at Paardeburg, the Canadians were front and
centre and this continued in the Second World War ... the very
thing. We were in Normandy. Our Canadian Forces with the 3rd
Div. My brother didn’t go in with the first wave and I didn’t
catch up to him until ... that’s another whole story ... July of
‘43-44! They obtained ... they got the furthest and obtained
their objective. No other did ... and they had to draw back but
they made their objective! And this is what they did and it was
nasty fighting all the way up through. My brother Ted never
talked about his war experiences and this is one thing that I
have to get across ... because when I came home from overseas, I
went back into retailing and Mrs. Howden came into the store.
Andy Howden and I met in grade 4 – elementary all the way
through highschool. I joined the air force. I didn’t know that
he joined the air force until I’m in Bournemouth and I meet
Sandy Borland. I knew Sandy was in and he was a fighter pilot –
had joined 416 squadron. I had joined 412 shortly before. And we
met in the main street and he said, “Guess what Charley? Andy
Howden and Howie Steen are in having lunch in the officers mess.
I’ll go and get them and we’ll have a picture taken.” So in
front of the Royal Bath in Bournemouth, there’s four fellows
from Guelph, Ontario; Andy Howden, Howie Steen, Charlie Fox, and
Sandy Borland. Two came back and two didn’t.
So Mrs. Howden came into the store – I went back into retailing
in Guelph; Walker’s Stores. She started crying ... came right up
to me and grabbed me by the shoulders and started shaking me.
This would be probably January 1946 just shortly after I came
back. She was saying, “Why my Andy and not you?” and started
pounding me on the chest. “Why my Andy and not you?!” And all I
could do was hold her and say, “Mrs. Howden, I don’t know why
not me.” And for that reason I didn’t talk about things for
forty years. My brother Ted never talked about it. And this is,
a lot of Veterans don’t talk. Some are talking now but don’t
talk because they felt guilty.