Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hand-Made Poppies Proudly Worn By Some Aboriginal Veterans To Show Respect

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2015 01:40 PM
    When navy veteran Joy Ward-Dockrey attends Remembrance Day ceremonies in Surrey, B.C., on Wednesday, she plans to proudly wear two poppies to show her respect.
     
    One will be the traditional red-and-black plastic flower made for the Royal Canadian Legion.
     
    The other will be a similarly coloured beaded poppy by an aboriginal artisan to mark Ward-Dockrey's service as an aboriginal veteran.
     
    Ward-Dockrey, who is Cree, says such hand-made beaded or woven poppies worn by some First Nation and Metis people are an important symbol.
     
    "They come from the heart of our people," said Ward-Dockrey, an official with the Canadian Aboriginal Veterans and Serving Members Association. 
     
    "We are not trying to stand out and say we are better. It is something we do for ourselves as aboriginal people to respect what happened to us and our healing journey."
     
    The federal government says more than 7,000 Indians served in the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War, along with an unknown number of Inuit, Metis and non-status Indians.
     
    Since then, aboriginals have served in Canada's Armed Forces in peace time, during overseas peacekeeping missions and in conflicts such as Afghanistan.
     
    The poppy is an international symbol of remembrance that was inspired by the poem "In Flanders Fields" written in 1915 by Lt.-Col. John McCrae, a Canadian surgeon who served in Belgium and France. He died later in the war.
     
    The Royal Canadian Legion website says it was granted trademark copyright of the poppy symbol in Canada in 1948. The organization is responsible for making poppies available across the country every year and uses donations to help veterans and their families.
     
    About 19 million plastic poppies were distributed last year.
     
    Officials were not available for comment on the hand-made poppies, but have suggested to other media that they are not a problem as long as they are not manufactured for commercial purposes.
     
    Richard Blackwolf, president of the Canadian Aboriginal Veterans, said the handmade poppies are not mass-produced.
     
    Blackwolf, who is Metis and served in the navy, said artists or groups have used small donations for such poppies to help aboriginal veterans.
     
    The handmade poppies are so beautiful and distinct that people come up to veterans to ask about them or how they can get one, he said.
     
    "I am always proud to wear the beaded poppies and I get many compliments on them.
     
    "They are something that is unique to the people who make them. The intent is perfect, because it is of the people, for the people, by the people."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hardev Sihota, Associate Of K.S. Makhan, Gets 6 Years In Jail For Smuggling Heroin Into Vancouver

    Hardev Sihota, Associate Of K.S. Makhan, Gets 6 Years In Jail For Smuggling Heroin Into Vancouver
    The ruling noted that Makhan hired Sihota for his services as an electrician. His suitcase had a false bottom that had two plastic bags with two kilograms of heroin worth 645,000 Canadian dollars 

    Hardev Sihota, Associate Of K.S. Makhan, Gets 6 Years In Jail For Smuggling Heroin Into Vancouver

    Richmond Woman Sexually Assaulted By Man Pretending To Be Massage Therapy Student At Kwantlen

    Richmond Woman Sexually Assaulted By Man Pretending To Be Massage Therapy Student At Kwantlen
    RCMP say the man allegedly approached a 19-year-old woman at Kwantlen Polytechnic University and said he was doing a survey.

    Richmond Woman Sexually Assaulted By Man Pretending To Be Massage Therapy Student At Kwantlen

    Kimberly Mack, First Nations Woman Alleges Illegal Search, Says Police Threatened To Seize Her Child

    Kimberly Mack, First Nations Woman Alleges Illegal Search, Says Police Threatened To Seize Her Child
    Kimberly Mack will appear in provincial court in Bella Coola Thursday asking to be compensated $15,000 for what she alleges was an illegal search that failed to turn up any drugs.

    Kimberly Mack, First Nations Woman Alleges Illegal Search, Says Police Threatened To Seize Her Child

    Urban Deer Problems To Be Addressed By New Committee, Provincial Cash

    Urban Deer Problems To Be Addressed By New Committee, Provincial Cash
    The Ministry of Forests says the province is committed to creating a Provincial Urban Deer Advisory Committee and providing up to $100,000 for future urban deer management projects.

    Urban Deer Problems To Be Addressed By New Committee, Provincial Cash

    Verdict Delayed For Speedboat Operator Accused In Shuswap Lake Death

    Verdict Delayed For Speedboat Operator Accused In Shuswap Lake Death
    Leon Reinbrecht is charged with criminal negligence causing death and criminal negligence causing bodily harm in the July 2010 crash on Shuswap Lake that claimed the life of Ken Brown.

    Verdict Delayed For Speedboat Operator Accused In Shuswap Lake Death

    Police Watchdog Probes Officer-Involved Death Of Man In B.C.'s Fraser Valley

    RCMP say British Columbia's police watchdog has been called to investigate the death of a man who apparently injured himself with a knife.

    Police Watchdog Probes Officer-Involved Death Of Man In B.C.'s Fraser Valley