Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Volunteers Compile Book Of Stories Of Canadian Troops Who Served In Afghanistan

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 22 Nov, 2014 11:25 AM
    EDMONTON — Volunteers hope a book of personal stories and images they've compiled from soldiers who served in Afghanistan will help Canadians remember a conflict that some fear is already fading from the public eye.
     
    "Afghanistan: A Canadian Story" also contains words submitted by police and civilians who served in places such as Kandahar, and the reminiscences of a mother of a soldier who was killed in action.
     
    Melanie Graham, editor of the coffee-table book, said the publication this month of the human stories will help people better understand what it was like to serve in the bloody, unresolved conflict and how it has affected the soldiers.
     
    "There was no clean closure to the Afghan mission from the Canadian perspective, or from anyone's perspective," said Graham, a retired military public affairs officer.
     
    "The popular sentiment is let's just not talk about it, because we are not really sure what we accomplished."
     
    Net proceeds from the book, up to $150,000, are to be donated to organizations that help soldiers and their families.
     
    The cost of publishing 5,000 copies has been donated by the Power Workers' Union in Ontario. An ebook version is planned for the spring. 
     
    Graham said the book contains anecdotes of some 150 men and women — in their own words — who served in Afghanistan between 2001 and 2014 . It includes a list of all the Canadian soldiers and civilians who died in the conflict.
     
    She said the book will be cathartic for soldiers who feel their efforts have been taken for granted or who are still dealing with their experiences overseas.
     
    "Is their bitterness? Is their frustration? Yes. Is there stress? Is there anxiety? Yes. Look at the statistics for post-traumatic stress disorder. It has taken its toll."
     
    Graham expects many soldiers and former soldiers will buy it as a kind of yearbook. Copies were given to the families of the 158 Canadian troops and five civilians who died in the conflict. 
     
    She said having the book at home will help spark conversations or help family members and friends who leaf through it understand what it was like to serve for months in an area where soldiers had to be hyper-vigilant, not being able to tell friend from foe.
     
    "It is very difficult for a lot of the folks who served to talk to their families about their experiences in Afghanistan, because if you weren't there, it is very difficult to grasp.
     
    "It is cathartic. It is insightful. It is human."
     
    On Sunday, Graham and her fellow volunteers are hosting a public launch for the book at Edmonton Garrison, a sprawling military base that is home to many of the units that were deployed to Afghanistan.
     
    An estimated 40,000 Canadians served in Afghanistan at different times over 14 years, she said.
     
    "These are boots-on-the-ground stories, the human perspective that will give Canadians an insight into the very ordinary men and women who do extraordinary things on behalf of Canadians."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Who Sewed First Maple Leaf Flag Celebrates 50th Anniversary Of The Event

    Woman Who Sewed First Maple Leaf Flag Celebrates 50th Anniversary Of The Event
    Historians and others may think about Feb. 15, the day in 1965 when the modern Canadian flag — bearing its familiar hallmark symbol, the Maple Leaf — was first raised on Parliament Hill.

    Woman Who Sewed First Maple Leaf Flag Celebrates 50th Anniversary Of The Event

    House passes Keystone XL bill; Senate vote Tuesday;Obama could veto

    House passes Keystone XL bill; Senate vote Tuesday;Obama could veto
    WASHINGTON — The Republican-controlled House of Representatives has passed legislation to approve the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada to Texas, and the Senate may follow next week.

    House passes Keystone XL bill; Senate vote Tuesday;Obama could veto

    Canada to do clinical trial of Ebola vaccine, far away from Ebola researchers

    Canada to do clinical trial of Ebola vaccine, far away from Ebola researchers
    TORONTO — A clinical trial of the made-in-Canada Ebola vaccine will be conducted in this country, Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada announced Friday.

    Canada to do clinical trial of Ebola vaccine, far away from Ebola researchers

    Mulcair plan for parliamentary harassment process draws on past experience

    Mulcair plan for parliamentary harassment process draws on past experience
    OTTAWA — Tom Mulcair is drawing on his past experience exposing sexual misconduct among Quebec's doctors to propose a process for handling harassment complaints against members of Parliament.

    Mulcair plan for parliamentary harassment process draws on past experience

    Charitable giving on the rise in Canada, up 8% at $624 in 2014: BMO poll

    Charitable giving on the rise in Canada, up 8% at $624 in 2014: BMO poll
    TORONTO — A new poll says charitable giving by Canadians remains on the rise and is expected to increase yet again next year.

    Charitable giving on the rise in Canada, up 8% at $624 in 2014: BMO poll

    Quebec man pleads not guilty in Florida to sex-related charges

    Quebec man pleads not guilty in Florida to sex-related charges
    FORT LAUDERALE, Fla. — A Quebec man pleaded not guilty in a Florida court on Friday to charges stemming from allegations he travelled to the U.S. to have sex with a teenage boy.

    Quebec man pleads not guilty in Florida to sex-related charges