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The Juno Beach Centre
opened its doors in the
town
of Courseulles-sur-Mer,
France last June on the anniversary
of D-Day. For many, it was a long
awaited tribute.
"It was the Canadian army that
liberated our town and on the soil
of Normandy they had no centre, no
monument," said Roger Alexandre,
Mayor of nearby Le Mesnil Patry and
President of the Association of Friends
of Juno Beach.
John McIntosh, a retired Chief Warrant
Officer from Halifax, agreed.
"It should have been built 30
or 40 years ago," he said. "It
has to be here in order to honour those
Canadians who gave their lives for
this country, for Europe, for the cause
of peace."
Anne Levesque is an Alberta native
and one of several Canadian students
working as a guide at the centre. For
her, the experience has provided an
education she couldn't
find in any university classroom.
"I had never taken a military
history class," she explained. "Our
training was extensive. We did the
beaches of Normandy and we followed
the path of the Canadians."
The town members have also played
a role in her education.
"Most of the people who are over
60 in this community were here on D-Day," she
said. "They have a lot of stories
and they love to share them."
The centre is more than just another
war museum, it is a gathering place
for Canadians abroad and, in the short
time since its opening, it has become
a pilgrimage site for many. Mary and
Helen Henderson of Calgary gave their
father a trip to the beaches of Normandy
for Remembrance Day.
"He watched the opening [of the
Juno Beach Centre] on Newsworld and
he was just so fascinated," explained
Helen Henderson.
"He lost his dad who was in World
War I to complications from mustard
gas," explained Mary Henderson. "He
also had a brother in the air force
in World War II."
For the sisters, the trip has been
a worthwhile experience, helping explore
a part of history that has remained
more of an abstract in their minds
until this point.
"When you think of it," said
Helen Henderson, "Seventeen-year-old
kids, high cliffs, a day like today...
it's not just moving, it's visceral."
John Westlake, from Moncton, also
felt a very close connection to the
Canadian combatants while standing
on Juno Beach. He lost three uncles
within four days in the D-Day campaign.
"We believe we are the only family
in Canada to lose three brothers," he
said.
The family made a personal commitment
to share their story and, several years
ago, a park in Toronto was named after "the
boys," as Westlake affectionately
calls them.
"We want everyone in the world
to know the story," he said. "We
are not looking for anything. We just
want everyone to know what some people
did for their country."
Last year marked Westlake's first
visit to Normandy and, after drinking
a toast at his uncles' graves, he and
his brother headed down to the shore.
"We went down onto the beach," he
recalled. "We were where thousands
had died and it seems to have been
forgotten. We were down on our bellies,
shooting at imaginary targets with
imaginary guns. We were caught up in
it."
Even if most traces of the D-Day landings
have washed away with the tide, the
Juno Beach Centre will serve as a reminder
of the Canadian contribution to both
French and Canadians alike.
"It's our duty to perpetuate
the memory of those youths," said
Alexandre. "In 1944, our future
was uncertain, our liberty was limited.
It's the duty of the French with regards
to our Canadian friends who gave their
lives for our freedom. With a centre
like this, there will always be people
who will come and visit."
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