Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Gets Military Burial In The Netherlands 70 Years After WWII Deaths

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2015 12:05 PM
    BERGEN-OP-ZOOM, Netherlands — A Canadian soldier has found a final resting place 70 years after he was killed during the Second World War.
     
    Pte. Albert Laubenstein died during the Allied advance through the Netherlands, towards the end of the conflict, but his body was buried in a battlefield grave that could not be located after the war.
     
    His remains were discovered last June and were identified through a combination of dental records, historical context and artifacts.
     
    Laubenstein was buried with military honours on Wednesday at the Canadian War Cemetery, some 70 kilometres from where he fought and died in a battle to drive the Germans back east.
     
    Laubenstein, who was born in Saskatoon, was serving in the Lincoln and Welland Regiment at the time of his death.
     
    He had joined the Canadian Army in 1940 and had also served with the 102nd Battalion of the Royal Canadian Artillery, the 4th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment and the Royal Canadian Infantry Corps.
     
    Laubenstein's burial was one of the highlights of a week of remembrances and celebrations to mark Canada's part in the liberation of the Netherlands.
     
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper attended a number of the events and has called those who liberated the Netherlands heroes who understood that some things are worth fighting for.
     
    Some 7,600 Canadians died in the Netherlands while helping to liberate the nation from Nazi oppression.
     
    From the autumn of 1944 right through the next spring, the First Canadian Army played a major role in liberating the Netherlands. The last German soldiers in the Netherlands surrendered on May 5, 1945.
     
    During the war, some members of the Dutch royal family stayed in Canada and many bonds have lasted to this day.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder
    Miriam Saunders says she's been overwhelmed with grief since the slaying last year of her daughter Loretta, but the Inuit woman from Labrador says she still plans to continue her daughter's work as an advocate for murdered and missing aboriginal women.

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash
    Halifax Stanfield International Airport says antenna array damaged by the crash of the Air Canada flight has been completed and runway approach lights have also been repaired.

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue
    OTTAWA — The minutiae of Mike Duffy's contractual paperwork continues to hold the spotlight at the suspended senator's fraud trial.

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

    Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative

    Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative
    TISDALE, Sask. — A relative of a woman and three children murdered in Saskatchewan says their killer took photos of the bodies and sent them to the children's biological father.

    Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative

    Fatal B.C. Boating Trial Told 'Collective Shock' Hampered Police Probe

    Fatal B.C. Boating Trial Told 'Collective Shock' Hampered Police Probe
    Reinbrecht has been charged with one count each of criminal negligence causing death and criminal negligence causing bodily over the July 3, 2010, incident on Shuswap Lake that claimed the life of houseboat-operator Ken Brown. 

    Fatal B.C. Boating Trial Told 'Collective Shock' Hampered Police Probe

    Federal Government Disapproves Of Vancouver Plan To Regulate Medical Pot Shops

    Federal Government Disapproves Of Vancouver Plan To Regulate Medical Pot Shops
    A spokesman for Health Minister Rona Ambrose says marijuana use is still illegal in Canada and the government expects all local cities and police to respect and enforce the law.

    Federal Government Disapproves Of Vancouver Plan To Regulate Medical Pot Shops