Monthly Archives: February 2022

Stories of Service To Learn From. Your February 2022 Mission Matters newsletter is here!

A newsletter from the folks at the Wreaths Across America organization.


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Dear Michael Barbour,

 

The days are getting longer and, thankfully, a little warmer here at WAA Headquarters in Maine, and there is definite excitement in the air for 2022!

 

As we have poured over after-action reports, volunteer feedback and compared notes, the underlying theme across all departments was just how essential our volunteers are to Wreaths Across America’s continued success.

 

It is not lost on me or the WAA staff that the passion for the mission is demonstrated through so many dedicated individuals who not only understand, but live the mission and are our ambassadors on the local level. Every ceremony represents so much work and attention to detail but there is a component beyond those that continue to bring new people into the WAA family and that is, sincerity.

 

In communities all over the country veterans are honored by local families, but a common thread of understanding, and sacrifice for greater good pulls us all together and makes us stronger as one.

 

WAA looks forward to continuing to use our platforms: social media, newsletter and blog, and Wreaths Across America Radio to share stories, and to teach and fill the minds of our children through illustrations of service and sacrifice of real-life heroes.

 

We continue to depend on your understanding and help to carry out the year-long mission to fuel the next generation.

 

On behalf of the entire WAA Family, we thank you for your continued passion!

 

“Education is not the filling of a pot, but the lighting of a fire.” – W.B.Yeats

 

Remember – Honor – Teach

With gratitude,

karensignature

Karen Worcester

Executive Director

 

#FindAWay2022

A Lasting Legacy, Determination, Dedication and Distinction

As we learn and look to celebrate the people and stories of Black History Month, Joe Reagan shares details about the women of the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion. The “Six-Triple Eight” as they became known was the first and only all black Female Women Army Corp (WAC) unit to be deployed overseas during WWII and their mission was critical to the morale and success in the war.

The Tuskegee Legacy

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WWII had begun the first week James Sheppard was enrolled in high school. “A lot of young men at the time wanted to do their part for their country. It was a patriotic thing, and millions were signing up to get in. Dad heard they had established a program from African-American pilots, and he thought that was the thing to do.”

Tune in to Wreaths Across America Radio to learn more about the legacy of Master Sgt. James A. Sheppard, a member of the famed Tuskegee Airmen of World War II, as told by his son Bob Sheppard to Susan Patten.

 

The special Black History Month feature will air on the following days and times:

  • Wednesday, Feb. 23 at 4pm ET/1 pm PT
  • Friday, Feb. 25 at 11 am ET/8am PT

You’re Invited to this VIRTUAL Event:

Commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the Disappearance of Flying Tiger Line Flight 739

tiger flight anniversary

Join us on VIRTUALLY on Wednesday, March 16, at 12pm EST/9am PST, as we commemorate the lives and legacy of the 93 United States Army soldiers and 11 civilian crew members who disappeared without a trace on this day, in 1962 while enroute to Vietnam on a top secret mission.

Save the Date

Our first Radio RoundTable of the year is planned to air on Thursday, March 24 at 7pm ET.

 

This discussion, hosted by Executive Director Karen Worcester and Director of Military & Veteran Outreach Joe Reagan will focus on Military Caregivers. Guests will include Melissa Comeau, Director of the American Red Cross Military and Veteran Caregiver Network and

Molly Brooks, Registered Nurse as well as the CEO and Founder of Hero’s Bridge.

 

The team is accepting questions for this discussion in advance. If you have a question you’d like to hear discussed, please contact the team today!

Featured Merchandise

2021 Rockers are Back in Stock!

Each patch displays the date of a National Wreaths Across America Day and shows that you participated in one of our wreath-laying ceremonies.
rockers

Make sure to follow Wreaths Across America official channels on social media for the most up-to-the-minute news on the mission throughout the year:

Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
Instagram

Wreaths Across America, PO Box 249, Columbia Falls, ME 04623, United States, 877-385-9504

A Tribute To Our Nation’s Fallen

This online event from a fellow Bay Area veterans organization that may be of interest to some of our members.


TV series tells story of Canada’s Black sleeping car porters

An item from the folks at the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
The Royal Navy’s war on trees

TV series tells story of Canada’s Black sleeping car porters

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Despite oppression and discrimination in their day-to-day lives, hundreds of Black men volunteered for service in the Canadian Expeditionary Force between 1914 and 1918, only to be met with another uphill battle simply to go to war.

Most were rejected for service in local fighting units. About 800 eventually ended up in No. 2 Construction Battalion, a segregated support element commanded by mostly white officers. Still others—some 700—managed to join regular infantry units.

 

READ MORE

Vimy calendar
Military Milestones
The Battle over the fiords of Norway

Aubrey Cosens and the Victoria Cross

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

Aubrey Cosens was already a battle-hardened soldier when he earned the Victoria Cross three months shy of his 24th birthday.

He’d had a hard life. He was born in 1921 in remote Porquis Junction in northern Ontario, a town reachable only by train. His father was a railwayman. After his mother died when he was four years old, Aubrey was raised by a neighbour.

READ MORE

victoria cross
HearingLife

RCL members and their families can benefit from exclusive discounts on car 🚘, home 🏡, condo & tenant’s insurance @belairdirect. Call 1-833-294-2911 (BC, AB, ON & QC) or 1-866-473-9676 (NB, NS & PE) & mention you’re a Royal Canadian Legion member. Learn more at legion.ca/belairdirect.

Canvet Publication Ltd.

An photographer captures rural Canada; Louis Riel; jobs for scholars

A weekly newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Upcoming event: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • New exhibition reveals lost artistic vision of rural Canada in the 1930s
  • Manitoba celebrates Métis leader on Louis Riel Day
  • Two Canadian universities seek Canadianist faculty
NEXT EVENT
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
New Exhibition Reveals Lost Artistic Vision of Rural Canada in the 1930s
An exhibition of stunning black and white photographs at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, Canada uncovers a fresh vision of western Canada in the Great Depression, seen through the lens of a young Jewish Canadian artist. The Lost Expressionist: Nick Yudell, A Photographer Discovered, reveals the images of Nick Yudell (1916-1943), a previously unknown amateur photographer who lived in the town of Morden and in Winnipeg, Manitoba. This “lost world” was brought to light thanks to the persistence of one woman – Celia Rabinovitch, Ph.D., M.F.A. – with a little help and encouragement from the Canadian Studies Program.
For Celia Rabinovitch, artist, author and scholar, and longtime Canadian Studies affiliate, this exhibition is also personal. A painter and art historian, she was in art school when her father showed her the wooden box that Nick crafted for his life’s work before leaving for World War II in 1940. “When I first saw the negatives, I knew they were important, but I didn’t know how to work with them. The technology wasn’t there yet,” she says. When she began scanning and restoring the negatives in 2007, they fell into themes offering a visual story of Nick Yudell’s life and the communities he touched. It took nearly fifteen years for this labor of love to come to fruition.
Nick Yudell was born in Winnipeg in 1916, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants to Canada. Following his mother’s death, his father, who was supporting two other school-age children, brought him to live with his maternal aunt and his uncle David Rabinovitch in Morden. The youngest of nine children, Nick was particularly close to his cousin Milton Rabinovitch – Celia’s father. He received his first camera at the age of twelve. An avid photographer, he captured individuals in daily life in Morden and Winnipeg, where he lived with his father during high school in Winnipeg’s North End, returning to work in Morden in 1933. In 1940, he enlisted in the military to fight fascism in Europe – training for the RAF as part of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Nick Yudell became an RAF pilot stationed in North Africa and perished when his Vickers Wellington II on a mission to strike Nazi supply lines was shot down over Tunisia in 1943. He became a Canadian War hero; Yudell Lake in northern Manitoba is named for him.
Canadian Studies supported this project from the beginning, when Rabinovitch presented her work to the program in Berkeley. It sparked the imagination of former Canadian Studies director Nelson Graburn, who understood it as a complete visual archive of a relatively unknown time and place in Canada. “If it were not for Nelson’s encouragement, this exhibition (with accompanying book) probably wouldn’t have happened,” Rabinovitch says. She received a John A. Sproul Research Fellowship in 2012 to support her work. Now, ten years later, the photographs form an impressive exhibition that reveals Yudell’s original vision.
Yudell identified each image with the individual name, date, place, and lighting conditions, writing on brown envelopes that he inserted in his archive. He left his magazines and other photographic materials with Milton in Morden. Celia Rabinovitch visited there and conducted oral histories with those who remembered him to build a picture of the artist through these collected sources. “We can tie his use of chiaroscuro (dramatic, heavy contrast) to the film noir movies that he must have seen in the cinema. Several people that I interviewed remembered him, or recalled individuals depicted in his photographs. These observations rounded out his life.”
“This offers a prism of one man’s life, showing how rich and complex one person is,” says Rabinovitch. “Although he was a Canadian war hero, the show expresses the value of life through Nick’s portraits and images of daily life. Film was expensive; every shot counted. Nick expressed the personalities of the individuals around him. His themes cover dramatic lighting, photographic experimentation, and predict the course of his life.”
Rabinovitch hopes the exhibition also challenges notions about people from small towns and the west. She points to the diversity of Morden, which had a population largely consisting of immigrants. “They weren’t isolated from the world as some would assume. People there were curious and intellectually sophisticated. Growth and development – originating in agriculture- and the support of community were central to the daily life of the town. They were attentive to the patterns of life, and to support others – especially during the Dirty Thirties.”
The Lost Expressionist: Nick Yudell, a Photographer Discovered is on view at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg through August 1, 2022, and travels to the Pembina Hills Art Center, Morden, 2023. The exhibition is seeking seeking donations to cover material costs and prepare for a North American tour. For more information, see the exhibition website or contact thelostexpressionist@gmail.com.
The photographs included in this article were taken from the exhibition and provided courtesy of Celia Rabinovitch.
Manitoba Celebrates Métis Leader With Louis Riel Day
Today, people across North America are enjoying a day off – Presidents’ Day in the United States, and what’s usually called “Family Day” in Canada. But in Manitoba, the third Monday in February officially celebrates the Métis leader and provincial founder Louis Riel. A complex figure with a contested legacy, he has been called “the most written-about figure in Canadian history”. Riel led two uprisings against Canada’s federal government in defense of the rights of Francophones and Indigenous people in the early years of Confederation.
Riel was born in the Red River Colony in modern Manitoba, in a settlement composed largely of French-speaking Métis people. In the 1860s the colony was purchased by the Canadian government, and many English-speaking, Protestant settlers began moving to the territory. Riel was concerned that these settlers would soon come to dominate the area, especially when it seemed the government planned to redistribute lands in the colony already held by the Métis. Riel thus launched an uprising in 1867 that seized control of the territory, and organized an unrecognized provisional government. Subsequent negotiations led to the creation of the Province of Manitoba in the territory, and negotiated its entry into Canada under terms favorable for the Métis.
Riel was shortly thereafter elected to parliament as one of Manitoba’s first MP’s. However, he was unable to secure amnesty for his leadership in the rebellion, particularly the illegal execution of a pro-Canadian agent, and he fled to the United States without ever taking his seat. He lived in exile for the next ten years, eventually settling in Montana. During this time he experienced a prolonged mental deterioration, and allegedly came to believe himself to be a divinely-ordained leader and prophet.
Riel was eventually convinced to return to Canada to lead the 1885 North-West Rebellion in Saskatchewan. He was, however, captured by government troops, and controversially sentenced to death for treason. The sentence was hotly contested at the time, especially given Riel’s apparent mental state. While the government portrayed Riel as a dangerous, unstable rebel, many Métis and Francophone citizens viewed Riel as a martyr for their cause. His execution contributed to a widening divide between French and English-speakers in Canada; the defeat of Riel’s resistance movement led to domination of the prairies by English-speaking settlers, as he had feared. Many believed this was the driving force behind his execution.
While traditional histories depicted Riel as an anti-Canadian rebel, his legacy has been re-evaluated numerous times. Calls for a posthumous pardon have been raised on many occasions, as well as for recognition as one of the Fathers of Confederation. He is widely recognized as a folk hero in many parts of Canada, and admired as an avatar of popular resistance against an oppressive government. Ironically, while Riel viewed Canadian rule with skepticism, he has today become a “Canadian” national hero, thanks to his dedication to the contemporary Canadian values of social justice, diversity, and minority rights.
Two Canadian Universities Seeking Canadianist Faculty
Two Canadian universities are currently searching for scholars specializing in Canadian Studies to fill open faculty positions:
The Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies invites applications for the 2022-2023 Robarts Visiting Professorship at York University (Toronto, Ontario). The Professorship is open to full-time (tenured or tenure-track) faculty members who work on issues concerning Canada and who are based outside the country, are planning to go on sabbatical or other leave during 2022-2023 and have demonstrated scholarly expertise on Canada and a commitment to Canadian studies.
The McGill Institute for the Study of Canada at McGill University is seeking applications for a two-year Faculty-Lecturer Position with the possibility of reappointment for an additional two years. The position is designed to emphasize public affairs as a key feature of the Institute’s undergraduate programs. The successful candidate will be housed at the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, which promotes interdisciplinary inquiry, and will have the opportunity to engage with scholars from multiple disciplines. The successful candidate will teach six lecture/seminar courses in Canadian Studies a year, including the introductory course, CANS 200: Understanding Canada, and the capstone seminar, CANS 420: Shaping Public Affairs in Canada.
Image: McGill University Arts Building. Paul Lowry, Wikimedia Commons
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Friend Our military veterans are still fighting for the cause

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


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Hello Friend
Our military veterans are still fighting for the cause
RBLI are dedicated to supporting our Armed Forces veterans, but the fundraising support doesn’t only come from the public, but the veterans themselves who are still doing what they can to make a difference!

Whether it’s the support we receive from our more senior veterans living in our assisted living facilities, factory workers creating masterpieces at BBMC, or younger veterans raising awareness to help others suffering the effects of mental health and PTSD, RBLI are incredibly grateful to all of our supporters.

Veteran to run 10k a day for PTSD awareness
Meet James; a veteran of the Armed Forces, serving 11 years in the military, and member of the RBLI community. After serving as an infantry soldier with 1st Battalion Royal Anglian Regiment and two tours of Afghanistan, James experienced difficulties with his mental health and PTSD, proceeding to self-medicate with alcohol and, as a result, turning his life upside down.

Since joining RBLI’s ‘Step-In’ programme, James has made life-altering leaps towards his recovery. James has now challenged himself to run 10 kilometres every day during the month of March, resulting in the launch of James’ Journey – a campaign to raise awareness and funds to support others suffering the effects of mental health and PTSD.

DONATE TO JAMES’ JOURNEY
Royal Marine Veterans raise over £2,000 at Tesco
For the past two weekends, Royal Marine veterans, George (pictured) and David have been at different local Tesco branches, raising awareness and fundraising in aid of RBLI. The two Tommy Club Champions eagerly volunteered to help raise money for our great cause and we are extremely proud of them for raising an incredible amount of over £2,000!

But George and David haven’t stopped there! If you’re out doing the weekly shop at Grove Green Tesco in Weavering, Maidstone, today or tomorrow, you may well spot the two veterans collecting donations and selling some of our iconic Tommy Club products! Be sure to stop by and say hello!

Queen’s Green Canopy plaques now available!
RBLI is delighted to supply plaques on behalf of The Queen’s Green Canopy (QGC) – a unique tree planting initiative created to mark Her Majesty’s Platinum Jubilee in 2022, by inviting people from across the United Kingdom to “Plant a Tree for the Jubilee”.

Each plaque is available in two different sizes, and made from high-quality and recyclable Corten steel by our Armed Forces veterans. This means that your purchase goes towards the worthy cause of helping to create jobs for those who have served in the military.

BUY YOUR PLAQUE TODAY
Kellogg’s generously donate cereal to RBLI veterans
A huge thank you to Kellogg’s for their generous donation of delicious cereal for the veterans supported on RBLI’s Village. Thanks to the wonderful donations and support we receive from organisations such as Kellogg’s, we support hundreds of veterans to get back on their feet and regain their independence – just like Steve (pictured), who joined the First Battalion Welsh Guards in 1977.

Steve served in Northern Ireland, Falklands, Canada and Belize before leaving in 1989 due to suffering severe injuries following the bombing of Sir Galahad during the Falklands War. Steve had difficulties getting back to civilian life, but with the help of RBLI, he now works as a Team Leader at Britain’s Bravest Manufacturing Company, and explains that he now has “a new purpose in life”.

LISTEN TO STEVE’S STORY
Thank you so much for your ongoing support for RBLI.
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Our mailing address is:
Royal British Legion Industries, Hall Road, Aylesford, Kent, ME20 7NL

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