Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Poll Suggests Younger Canadians Interested In Attending Remembrance Day Events

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Nov, 2018 05:59 PM
    TORONTO — A new survey suggests Canadians of all generations are more likely to honour military veterans by attending a Remembrance Day ceremony this year.
     
     
    A poll commissioned by Historica Canada, the organization behind the popular Heritage Minutes videos, found a 10-per-cent spike in the number of respondents who planned to take part in a ceremony this year compared to 2017.
     
     
    The online poll, conducted by Ipsos, found 39 per cent of those surveyed had firm plans to attend a ceremony on Nov. 11 compared to 29 per cent the year before.
     
     
    The survey found plans were relatively consistent across demographics, with millennial respondents expressing the most consistent enthusiasm for attending Remembrance Day events. It found 41 per cent of 18- to 34-year-olds polled planned to attend, compared to 40 per cent of respondents over 55 and 38 per cent of participants between 35 and 54.
     
     
    Historica CEO Anthony Wilson-Smith called the findings around millennials gratifying, saying the poll results challenge the theory that the generation with the fewest tangible connections to the two World Wars would be most likely to ignore Remembrance Day.
     
     
    "We are now at a point where we have to contemplate that the day will come when there aren't any more World War Two veterans," Wilson-Smith said in a telephone interview.
     
     
     
    "That leaves you to wonder if, when everyone is gone, will people still be able to grasp the significance of war, of sacrifice, of the causes that drove people to war, and the outcomes," he said.
     
     
    "The answer would appear to be yes."
     
     
    Wilson-Smith speculated that at least part of the surge in interest in Remembrance Day ceremonies stems from the fact that this year's events will mark the 100th anniversary of the armistice that brought the First World War to an end after four years of strife.
     
     
    But he said the younger generation's apparent connection to the day may also come from personal ties to those who served in more recent conflicts, such as the war in Afghanistan in which 158 Canadian soldiers and two civilians were killed.
     
     
    The poll found 95 per cent of those surveyed felt Remembrance Day ceremonies should honour veterans of recent conflicts. It also found 83 per cent of respondents planned to wear a poppy in the run-up to Nov. 11, with baby boomers showing the most enthusiasm for that idea.
     
     
    The online poll of 1,002 Canadians also surveyed how many respondents had visited a cenotaph or other war memorial in their community or elsewhere.
     
     
    Participants in British Columbia were most likely to have done so, the survey found, noting the provincial response rate of 64 per cent was well above the national average of 46 per cent.
     
     
    The Ipsos survey was conducted between Oct. 25 and Oct. 29, Historica said.
     
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. To Probe Money Laundering 'Red Flags' In Real Estate, Horse Racing

    The British Columbia government is launching separate reviews into the possibility of money laundering involved in the real estate market, horse racing, luxury vehicle sales and the financial services sector.

    B.C. To Probe Money Laundering 'Red Flags' In Real Estate, Horse Racing

    135 Students Stung By Wasps During Terry Fox Run At Kamloops, B.C. School

    135 Students Stung By Wasps During Terry Fox Run At Kamloops, B.C. School
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Staff at an elementary school in Kamloops, B.C., were faced with a gym full of crying children after about 135 were stung by a swarm of wasps during their Terry Fox run today.

    135 Students Stung By Wasps During Terry Fox Run At Kamloops, B.C. School

    U.S. Safety Officials Fault Air Canada Pilots For Last Year's Near Disaster

    U.S. Safety Officials Fault Air Canada Pilots For Last Year's Near Disaster
    United States federal safety officials say pilot error was the reason an Air Canada jetliner came within three to six metres of crashing into a plane on the ground last year in San Francisco.

    U.S. Safety Officials Fault Air Canada Pilots For Last Year's Near Disaster

    Man Apologizes For Yelling Vulgar Phrase At Halifax Reporter Heather Butts During Broadcast

    Man Apologizes For Yelling Vulgar Phrase At Halifax Reporter Heather Butts During Broadcast
    HALIFAX — A female reporter says she's satisfied by a restorative justice process that saw a man apologize for yelling a vulgar phrase at her.

    Man Apologizes For Yelling Vulgar Phrase At Halifax Reporter Heather Butts During Broadcast

    MPs Could Debate Whether To Revoke Suu Kyi's Honorary Citizenship: Trudeau

    MPs Could Debate Whether To Revoke Suu Kyi's Honorary Citizenship: Trudeau
    UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is opening the door to debate on whether to strip Myanmar's de-facto leader of her honorary Canadian citizenship.

    MPs Could Debate Whether To Revoke Suu Kyi's Honorary Citizenship: Trudeau

    Homeless People Complain They Are Cut Off In Park, Want B.C. To Take Action

    Homeless People Complain They Are Cut Off In Park, Want B.C. To Take Action
    LANGFORD, B.C. — A homeless woman living at a Vancouver Island campground with nearly three dozen others says vulnerable people aren't getting support from their families because officials have locked the gates to the public.

    Homeless People Complain They Are Cut Off In Park, Want B.C. To Take Action