Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gunned-Down Soldier Cpl. Nathan Cirillo Remembered 1 Year On At Hilltop Ceremony

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 11:44 AM
    HAMILTON — Scores of people turned out under dark skies for a hilltop ceremony on Wednesday in honour of a soldier gunned down a year ago as he stood guard at the National War Memorial on Parliament Hill.
     
    Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, 24, was shot fatally from behind by a lone gunman, who then raced into the House of Commons before he, too, was gunned down.
     
    "It was cowardly, it was evil, and most of all, it was tragic," Cirillo's sister Nicole told the assembled crowd.
     
    "When Nathan passed away, our family's snowglobe was shaken and turned upside down, and now everything is falling in a new place. It is unrecognizable. There is sorrow and pain. All we want to do is go back to the world that we once knew."
     
    At the same time, Cirillo said, the tragedy had brought forward an outpouring of comfort and support for the family from all over the world.
     
    Cirillo, a member of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders regiment, left a young son, Marcus Cirillo, who goofed around before the ceremony, as well as his mother, step-father and siblings who were in attendance.
     
    The evening ceremony, in near darkness, included a marching on of the colours, a "monument of light," and words from the regiment's padre, Robert Fead.
     
    "We gather to remember, ironically, because he lost his life at the very place where Canadians, particularly those of us who serve in the military, also gather to remember," Fead said.
     
    "May his life and death inspire all of us to work for greater peace in our nation and in our world."
     
    Cirillo was also being remembered for the love that he had for his family, for rescue dogs, his smile and his friendliness, Fead said.
     
    The young corporal and his partner, Cpl. Branden Stevenson, were on ceremonial sentry duty at the war memorial when Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, shot him in the back before storming into the Centre Block on Parliament Hill.
     
     
    Days after the shooting, politicians, members of the military and friends and family packed a Hamilton church while thousands stood quietly in the streets and watched a the procession of an estimated 4,500 members of the armed forces and first responders marched through the city's downtown.
     
    Coming just 48 hours after Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent, 53, was murdered in a hit-and-run by an Islamic-extremist in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., the assault on Canada's Parliament sent shock waves through the country and prompted an outpouring of grief.
     
    Lesya Dyk, whose son is in the military, said she remembers the shock after the killings.
     
    "We felt such a sense of panic," Dyk said after the Cirillo service on Wednesday. "The military supports their own." 
     
    Following the ceremony at a waterside park, attended by some people with candles and others with the Maple Leaf, members of Cirillo's regiment marched back to their local armoury for a final, private dispatch.
     
    On Thursday morning at the War Memorial, Gov. Gen. David Johnston, outgoing Prime Minister Stephen Harper and prime minister-designate Justin Trudeau will be part of a commemoration, along with members of Cirillo and Vincent's families, soldiers from Cirillo's reserve regiment, first responders and police.
     
    There will also be a 21-gun salute and a flypast by four CF-18 fighter jets, similar to Remembrance Day ceremonies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The World's Watching Canada: The Baseball Team, Not The Election

    The World's Watching Canada: The Baseball Team, Not The Election
    The Toronto Blue Jays championship run has received five times more international news coverage than the federal election campaign, says a prominent media-monitoring agency.

    The World's Watching Canada: The Baseball Team, Not The Election

    Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

    Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award
    The exhibit combines artifacts and new technologies such as 3-D printing at three different locations to tell the story of the ancient Musqueam villages and burial sites that Vancouver was built on.

    Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

    Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

    Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes
    Beverley McLachlin told an administration of justice conference in Saskatoon that media have been used to shape a certain perception of indigenous people, sometimes in very negative ways.

    Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

    Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

    Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns
    Police in Fredericton say a suspected firearm being carried by a man in the city this morning turned out to be an umbrella.

    Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

    Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

    Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft
    Police in Saskatoon are swept up in an investigation into the theft early Wednesday morning of $25,000 worth of new snowblowers.

    Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

    Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat

    Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat
    The university's Waterloo, Ont., campus was closed early Friday morning and students and faculty were told to stay away.

    Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat