Monthly Archives: March 2021

Feminists on the Homefront | Brushes with Climate Change

Note the initial item about women on the homefront that may be of interest to members.


Weekly Ritual | Basketball’s Best | Quilt
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Black and white photo of two women in a munitions factory.

Feminists on the Homefront

Post-war women went to work. They won the vote. Then the movement stalled. Read more

Photo of a quilt from a museum collection.

Quilt

This quilt was handmade for a historian working for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Read more

Members of an arts project pose behind a black and white photo of the same location.

Brushes with Climate Change

Rockies Repeat project explores the intersection between conservation, art, history, and culture. Read more

A photo of a pavilion from Expo 67.

Montreal’s Designing Women

In the 1960s, Montreal was a Modern architectural showcase. From Place Ville Marie to Place Bonaventure to Expo 67, the city reverberated with the construction of new and remarkable buildings. Read more

Illustration of a girl playing basketball.

Basketball’s Best

It started with a high school girls’ basketball team in Edmonton, and ended with one of the best winning records ever. Read more

A 1934 advertisement for laundry soap.

Washday: The Weekly Ritual

For generations, society has historically expected women to not only do the laundry — but to do it well. Read more

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Cover of the February-March 2021 issue of Canada's History featuring Banting and Best.

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Canada’s History Archive featuring The Beaver

Please note: Some items featured in our newsletters and social media will include links to the Canada’s History Archive. The Beaver magazine was founded, and for decades was published, during eras shaped by colonialism. Concepts such as racial, cultural, or gender equality were rarely, if ever, considered by the magazine or its contributors. In earlier issues, readers will find comments and terms now considered to be derogatory. Canada’s History Society cautions readers to explore the archive using historical thinking concepts — not only analyzing the content but asking questions of who shaped the content and why.
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Salute! March 2021/ Salut! Mars 2021

Note this newsletter from Veterans Affairs Canada.  We encourage all members to register themselves.


(Le message français suit) 

Veterans Affairs Canada’s magazine, Salute! is now an e-newsletter. Please share this e-mail with your friends and networks, and encourage them to register by visiting letstalkveterans.ca to keep up on issues that matter to Veterans and their families.

Let us know what you think about the new Salute! by emailing vac.consultation-consultation.acc@canada.ca.


International Women’s Day

We marked International Women’s Day in Canada and around the world on 8 March. The day is an opportunity to reflect on the progress made towards gender equality and to celebrate those who have played a role in advancing this goal. It is also a chance to raise awareness of the work left to be done.

Women have served in Canada’s military for more than a century. Overcoming many barriers to serve in uniform, they’ve paved the way for future generations while making the world a safer, more equitable place.

Meet two of these strong women: Corporal (Ret’d) Francine Beaudry and Sergeant (Ret’d) Marjorie (Worby) Stetson. Serving in the Canadian Women’s Army Corps (CWAC) in the Second World War, Stetson worked to help break enemy coded messages. More recently, Beaudry served in the Canadian Armed Forces for 18 years, including deployments to Egypt and Germany, and provided communications support to Canadians serving in the Gulf War from Canada.

Get to know more of the women who served our country by visiting our web feature, They Proudly Served.


Virtual Veterans panel – How should Canada commemorate our post-Korean War military efforts? 

Join us for an approximately one-hour exploration of this subject at 1:00 pm ET on 19 March 2021. Our virtual panel will feature three Canadian Armed Forces Veterans sharing their personal reflections: Lieutenant-General (ret’d) Lloyd Campbell, Lieutenant-Colonel (ret’d) Chris Hutt and Sergeant (ret’d) Geneviève Gauthier.

To register, email us at vac.education-education.acc@canada.ca before March 15. Please indicate if you wish to watch in English or French.


PPE and other Treatment Benefits options during COVID-19

There are some things to know about Treatment Benefits during this pandemic period.

Since the beginning of COVID measures in early 2020, you may have the cost of personal protective equipment (PPE – like masks) covered for medical appointments, including protective equipment for a medically required escort or family member joining you for an appointment.

Virtual healthcare and telehealth are also accepted as an alternative to in-person medical appointments.

For services other than prescription drugs (like physiotherapy or counselling) you don’t need to renew your prescriptions.

To learn more about the Treatment Benefits options available to you during the pandemic, please check out our list of FAQs.


Mental health and your family

Family members play an important role in their loved one’s well-being and recovery. As a family member of a Veteran, it’s also important for you to take care of your mental well-being.

There are a variety of services available to support your well-being, including:

  • Operational stress injury clinics which take a family approach to support treatment and well-being.
  • Operational Stress Injury Social Support (OSISS) provides a national peer support network for CAF members, Veterans and their families, close friends or caregivers.
  • VAC Assistance Service is available 24/7 to family members of Veterans, including those who aren’t clients of VAC. Call 1-800-268-7708 (TDD/TYY: 1-800-567-5803) to talk to a mental health professional.
  • Pastoral outreach programs are available to you for spiritual support if you are experiencing loss of a loved one.
  • HOPE program is another resource where you can connect with families that have gone through a similar experience as your own.
  • Veteran Family Program connects medically releasing and released Veterans and their families to community supports.

Caring for your own mental health is the first step in supporting others. Remember that your well-being matters and that we have services available for you.


Offer feedback on Canada’s proposed accessibility regulations

Proposed Accessible Canada Regulations are now available in Canada Gazette, Part I.

These proposed regulations provide details on how federally regulated entities must prepare and publish an accessibility plan, progress report, and feedback process, as required by the Accessible Canada Act (ACA). The proposed regulations also establish a framework for administrative monetary penalties.

Canadians now have until 19 April 2021 to offer feedback on the proposed regulations. Information on how to provide feedback can be found in Canada Gazette, Part I.

If you have any questions, please reach out to accessible-canada@hrsdc.gc.ca.


Help us improve My VAC Account

You are invited to participate in a short survey to let us know how we can improve My VAC Account and its features. For this study, we are collecting feedback from My VAC Account users to better understand how they use the platform and what other business they would like to do online.

Your input is important to us. Thank you for helping us improve My VAC Account.

https://phoenixspi.qfimr.com/MyVACAccount-MonDossierACC


Transitioning to life after service

The road to life after service can be challenging. We are working with the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) to make the transition experience as seamless and stress-free as possible.

Together, we have been exploring a new approach to transition focused on the individual needs of members and their families. A trial started at CFB Borden in February 2019, expanded to CFB Petawawa on 17 February 2021, and it will continue to roll out across the country over the next few years.

As part of this new approach, each member has direct access to a transition advisor who can help you create a transition plan that suits your needs and goals.

If you’re not in Borden or Petawawa, there are still many programs and services available such as the Education and Training Benefit and Career Transition Services.

Your drive, courage, and determination are what brought you success in the CAF. The transition trial and our career, education, and financial programs are options to help you in life after service.


Veteran and Family Well-Being Fund recipients to be announced soon

Over the past two years, the Veteran and Family Well-Being Fund has provided organizations with funding to support initiatives and research in areas like Veteran homelessness, mental health, and the transition to life after service. The most recent call for applications closed last month and we will soon announce the latest projects and organizations to receive funding.

Shaping Purpose received support from the fund in 2018. Veteran Owen Parkhouse says Shaping Purpose helped him and his family set personal, post-retirement goals and make a realistic plan to achieve them. Read more about Owen and other success stories on our website.


Help us reach more Veterans and families

If you have served in the Canadian Armed Forces or RCMP, you may qualify for VAC programs or services that can support your financial, educational or family’s well-being.

We will be promoting some of our services throughout March using advertising in the media and online.

Please help us reach as many people as possible by sharing information with your networks. Our goal is to ensure all Veterans and their families know that services and supports are available.


Sexual harassment at CAF-DND

If you experienced sexual harassment, sexual assault, gender or LGBTQ2+ discrimination in a CAF-DND workplace, you may make a confidential claim for financial compensation and participate in a restorative engagement program.

Learn more: caf-dndsexualmisconductclassaction.ca/

Will you brave the Great Tommy Sleep Out?

An item from the organization formerly known as There But Not There.


Have you signed up to the Great Tommy Sleep Out ?

During the month of March, we are challenging you to join The Great Tommy Sleep Out.
RBLI are inviting you to sleep outside for one night to fundraise for RBLI and raise awareness of homeless ex-servicemen and women.

Join many others braving the challenge, including David, who is sleeping outside for 12 days in his WW2 tent from 1944. David, who found his tent in a garage being used as a dust cover, is surviving off of ‘trench stew’, made in a period correct petrol can!

Do you think you can brave the cold March nights? Sign up today and we will send you everything you need in one handy pack. When your first donation comes in, you’ll also receive a free beanie hat!
FIND OUT MORE & SIGN UP NOW

Does your Town have a Tommy?

Does your local area have it’s own Tommy? At RBLI, we believe that more should be done to commemorate and support our Nation’s Armed Forces and veterans. We believe that every town and village should have it’s own Tommy.

Does your community have one?

Our new range of Tommies are perfect for long lasting, outdoor use. Head over to Facebook and share our post to help get one in your area!

SHARE OUR POST

Why not display a Tommy in your own garden or street? Our Unknown Tommy and Garden Tommy are perfect for outdoor use.

Unknown Tommy Statue
Unknown Tommy Statue
£175.00
SHOP NOW
Garden Tommy
Garden Tommy
£74.99
SHOP NOW

Meet Steve, one of our Veterans at RBLI

By purchasing from the RBLI Shop, you are supporting RBLI’s amazing work in helping veterans like Steve back into employment.

Watch this video to learn more about Steve’s story, and how RBLI has helped him and his family.

From all of us at RBLI, we thank you for your support and hope you have a lovely weekend!
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Copyright © 2021 Royal British Legion Industries. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Royal British Legion Industries Ltd, Hall Road, Aylesford, Kent, ME20 7NL

Show your support for Canadian Studies this Thursday!

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Special message from Director Bloemraad: Why your gift makes a big difference!
  • Tomorrow: Filmmaker George Tombs discusses his film The Blinding Sea
  • Upcoming event: Is Canada’s healthcare system a model for the US?
  • External event: “Canadian Network Spotlight” video series
Dear friends,
Tomorrow, it will be one year since the Canadian Studies team was last on campus. A lot has changed for our program in those twelve months; however, our commitment to promoting a greater understanding of Canada and its people has never waivered. And while we’ve certainly faced challenges, we’ve also found some surprising opportunities to strengthen our program during that time.
In this “virtual” year, we’ve found new ways to expand our reach and reach an international audience. Our online colloquia have attracted guests from across North America; in fact, they’ve been so successful we plan to make future in-person events available online. When travel restrictions grounded our Hildebrand Fellows last year, we offered spot awards to help grad students struggling financially. And we’ve taken the opportunity to re-launch our newsletter and social media to better communicate the work that our program and our wonderful student affiliates are doing.
This Thursday, March 11, is Big Give, Berkeley’s annual giving day. If you believe that the work we do is valuable, please help us with a financial donation. Canadian Studies is a donor-supported program, with three-quarters of our funding comes from private donations. At a time when many small programs are struggling, your generosity ensures that we can continue providing quality free programming to the community and supporting promising student researchers.
Sincerely,
Irene Bloemraad
Program Director
Barnes Chair in Canadian Studies
Read this before you give: you could help us win a big prize!
Throughout the day on March 11, the university will be running special timed contests with thousands of dollars in prizes for winning units. Your gift of any size could help us win big if your name is randomly selected during the contest period.
Our priority contests are below; just see which group you fall into and make your gift during the contest window. It’s that easy!
  • Anyone: Sign up for a recurring gift ($1,500)
  • Berkeley alumni: Donate between 10 a.m. and noon PT ($1,500)
  • Non-alumni: Donate between 9-11 a.m. PT ($1,500)
Canadian Studies makes a big impact on students!
“Knowing that Canadian Studies was here made me feel confident that I could keep my connection to Canadian scholarship… It was actually a major draw in deciding to come to Berkeley! I also appreciated the way that Canadian Studies works hard to integrate graduate students by giving us opportunities to share our research and practice presenting our work in a supportive environment.”
  • Dr Julia Lewandoski, 2016 Hildebrand Fellow and current assistant professor of history at Cal State San Marcos.
Your donations help make free events like the following possible.
Upcoming Events
Free Documentary and Film Talk: The BIinding Sea
March 9 | 12:30 p.m. | RSVP here
Join filmmaker George Tombs for a discussion of his 2020 documentary The Blinding Sea. The film chronicles the life of Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen (1872-1928), the first person to lead a successful expedition through the Northwest Passage. It evokes the joys, sorrows, relationships, and missed opportunities in the life of Amundsen, who disappeared mysteriously during a polar flight in 1928. The film places a special focus on Amundsen’s relations with the Indigenous people he encountered on his voyages, particularly the Inuit.
The documentary is currently available online to registered attendees. We request that all participants watch the film prior to joining the director’s talk tomorrow.
George Tombs is an award-winning author and filmmaker based in Montreal, who works in both English and French. He is currently writing a biography of Roald Amundsen. His past works include Robber Baron, a biography of controversial media tycoon Conrad Black, and his recent humorous novel Mind the Gap.
Panel Discussion: The Canadian Healthcare System:
A Model for the US?
April 6 | 12:30 p.m. | RSVP here
Most Canadians are proud of their national healthcare system, widely considered one of the best in the world. However, in the United States opponents on both sides of the healthcare reform debate frequently reference the Canadian experience. For a growing number of Americans, Canada is a model for a potential US single-payer system. However, for many others a “Canadian” system conjures images of long waits and rationing. Join Canadian Studies for a special panel exploring how Canada’s healthcare system really works and why its reputation in the US is so polarized.
Gregory Marchildon is a professor of comparative healthcare at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto. He specializes in Canada’s healthcare system and has written extensively on comparative policy.
Amanda Aronczyk is a journalist and co-host of the NPR show Planet Money. Her recent episode “Frame Canada” explored the US insurance lobby’s long-running PR campaign against Canada’s healthcare system to block major healthcare reform.
Daniel Béland is the director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada and James McGill Professor in the Department of Political Science at McGill University. He studies social policy and health care reform, and their relationship to fiscal policy.
Image: Woman protests for healthcare reform in Connecticut, 2009. Credit: Sage Ross on Wikimedia Commons.
Affiliate/External Events
Video Series: Canadian Network Spotlights
Ongoing | Watch here
The Canadian Studies Centre at the University of Innsbruck has launched a new series highlighting the work of the university’s Canadian partners. A new video will be released every Monday in March; please visit the website for a full speaker list. Sample topics include “Approaching Feminism in Canadian, Indigenous and Québécois Literatures” and “How Does Reconciliation With Indigenous People Work in the Face of Canadian Nationalism?”
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Paying Tribute this Commonwealth Day

While Commonwealth Day was yesterday, we received this notice overnight and wanted to pass it along to our members.


Paying Tribute this Commonwealth Day.

Today, Monday 8 March, marks Commonwealth Day. Twelve months ago, we were able to celebrate Commonwealth Day with our friends and family. Since then, we’ve had to learn how to live during an international pandemic away from our loved ones and moving our work to our homes.

While there is light at the end of the tunnel, we can’t yet meet up with our loved ones as we might like to, so for this Commonwealth Day, we’re encouraging people to take their own private moments of remembrance.

We’d love to hear about people visiting their local cemeteries and memorials on Commonwealth Day, and you can post your tribute on social media using the hashtag #ShareYourTribute. Or it’s not too late to leave one of our new physical tributes at a headstone or memorial near you.

Tributes can be purchased online, and all profits from their sale will be donated to the Commonwealth War Graves Foundation, the Commission’s charity arm which funds education and outreach programmes to engage the public in the work of the CWGC and keep alive the stories of the men and women it commemorates.

Order your Tribute today

Brookwood Military Cemetery contains over 5000 Commonwealth casualties from both the First and Second World War, making it the perfect place to pay tribute to all the men and women of the Commonwealth who lost their lives during the World Wars.

To represent the fallen from across the Commonwealth, we’ve chosen a casualty from each of our member governments to lay one of our physical tributes for:

Major Oliver Hogue – AUSTRALIADied 3 March 1919
Age 38

Sydney-born Oliver fought on Gallipoli, before serving in Egypt and Palestine with the Imperial Camel Corps. By 1918 he commanded a squadron of the 14th Light Horse Regiment in Damascus. Having survived these deadly campaigns, he succumbed to influenza whilst on leave in the UK after the war had ended.

Nursing Sister Sarah Ellen Garbutt – CANADA20 August 1917
Age 41

A nurse at the Royal Memorial Hospital in Ontario, Sarah volunteered for the Canadian Army Nursing Service in 1917. She was posted to the UK, but only a month later was diagnosed with abdominal cancer and died in Vincent Square Hospital, London.

Leading Aircraftsman Yousif Ali – INDIA12 May 1947
Age 42

Born in Sylhet (now part of Bangladesh), Yousif moved to England in the 1920s. At the outbreak of the Second World War he enlisted in the Royal Air Force (RAF) Volunteer Reserve. While serving in Europe after the war he fell ill and was brought back to England, where he died at the RAF Halton Military Hospital.

Flying Officer Tohunga Richard Riwai – New Zealand21 February 1944
Age 25

Tohunga Richard Riwai was born in September 1918. He worked as a clerk and played the saxophone in Colin Castleton’s band at the Ritz Hall in Rotorua, New Zealand. Just before the Second World War he married Te Ao Korewarangi Katie Rodgers and they had three children together.

Pilot Officer George James Drake – SOUTH AFRICA9 September 1940
Age 20

Rejected by the South African Air Force, George travelled to England and joined the RAF in 1939. During the Battle of Britain he was shot down by a German Messerschmitt and it was not until 1972 that his remains were discovered in Kent. His funeral at Brookwood was attended by his surviving brothers.

Ensign Violette Reine Elizabeth Szabo – UNITED KINGDOMJanuary 1945
Age 23

War widow Violette was recruited to the Special Operations Executive and twice undertook dangerous missions in France. She was captured and tortured before being sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp, where she was eventually executed. Violette’s bravery posthumously earned her the George Cross.

You can learn more about our sites and the casualties we commemorate across Great Britain, including Brookwood Military Cemetery and the casualties above, by visiting our Our War Graves, Your History pages.
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Copyright © 2020 Commonwealth War Graves Commission, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
2 Marlow Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire, SL6 7DX

www.cwgc.org