Spiritual leaders call for respect, unity during Remembrance Day ceremony
OTTAWA — Thousands of Canadians braved sub-zero temperatures in the nation’s capital on Monday to honour and remember all those — no matter their background — who offered up their lives to defend Canada, its values and its principles.
Reminders of that common cause among those who served this country and died for it figured prominently during this year’s Remembrance Day ceremony alongside calls from spiritual leaders for peace instead of war, unity rather than division, and respect for diversity.
“Let us continue to make Canada worthy of their dedication and sacrifice, a country in which respect, harmony, inclusion, responsibility and kindness fill the air,” Rabbi Reuven Bulka told the assembled crowd, speaking of those who had given their lives for Canada.
He went on to note that this year marked the 75th anniversary of D-Day, when Canada and its allies launched a massive amphibious assault on France that marked the beginning of the end of Nazi Germany in the Second World War, before suggesting every day should be a D-Day of sorts.