Yearly Archives: 2022

Consultation Results- Health Claims Processing

If this applies to any of our Canadian members, please be sure to check out the results of the consultation process.


The VAC Health Claims Processing consultation results are in. Thank you for your participation.

The feedback you provided will help us improve the requirements and implementation of our next Federal Health Claims Processing Services contract.

You can read the consultation recap on Let’s Talk Veterans: Health Claims Processing.
Sincerely,

Stakeholder Engagement and Outreach Team

Veterans Affairs Canada

You’re receiving this email because you are a registered participant on Let’s Talk Veterans.

The myth of dying a glorious death at war

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Stephen J thorne

IWM

The myth of dying a glorious death at war

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

 

The letter out of 44 Casualty Clearing Station, British Expeditionary Force, France, is neatly written in vivid blue ink on a creased and wrinkled page of notebook paper, its edges stained deep red in an oddly patriotic, if not disturbing, rendering of time or maybe circumstance.

Written by the chaplain to the forces, Leonard T. Pearson, it’s dated July 10, 1917.

There’s no destination address recorded on the page, but the recipient was William John Paul of Burin, Nfld., a merchant and father of Private Reginald Paul.

Twenty-one-year-old Reginald had been a member of the storied Newfoundland Regiment. He was killed on the first day of battle at the Somme—July 1, 1916. A day venerated by Newfoundlanders.

 

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5 Volume Collection

CWM/19920085

Canada’s Nursing Sisters of the First World War

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

The Hall of Honour in the centre block on Parliament Hill was designed to take your breath away.

The soaring arches and vaulted ceilings draw the eye upward. Soft light from high windows imparts a warm glow to the limestone.

It feels like a space built for a high purpose. It is used for state occasions and formal parliamentary events.

Along the walls are commemorative plaques, reliefs and statues. The largest among them is the Nursing Sisters’ Memorial.

 

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Safe Step Walk In Tubs

Maple Leaf Route Webinar – Canadian Servicewomen of the Second World War

Note these up-coming events from a partner of Dominion Command.  The first webinar, which may be of interest to some of our members, is scheduled for this evening.


Season Finale
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STACEY BARKER


TO HELP WIN THE FIGHT: CANADIAN SERVICEWOMEN OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR

31 August @ 7:30 pm ET

CLICK HERE to register

The Second World War brought many crucial changes to the lives of Canadian women, including the opportunity for wider military service. Recruits who joined the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, the Royal Canadian Air Force Women’s Division, and the Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service challenged conceptions, broke barriers, and helped win a war. This talk will examine key aspects of their wartime experiences using biography and material culture.
Upcoming Webinars
Presented by:
Recent Events

R. SCOTT SHEFFIELD

Fighting a White Man’s War: Canada’s First Nations Peoples and the Second World War

MIKE BECHTHOLDPer Ardua ad Astra: The Royal Canadian Air Force and the Second World War
ANNA PEARSON, STEPHEN CONNOR AND ROBERT CATSBURG

Ne-kah-ne-tah: The Liberation of Welberg, Memory, Meaning and Experience

JEFF NOAKES

Canada and the Second World War at Sea

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Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada · 75 University Ave W · Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 · Canada

Upcoming Events at the Interfaith Center at the Presidio

Note this up-coming event organized by our colleagues at the Interfaith Center at the Presidio that should be of interest to members.


Interfaith Center at the Presidio

Unleashing the Power of

Interreligious Cooperation

Dear Friends of the ICP at the Presidio Main Post Chapel,

We are the Interfaith Center at the Presidio. We believe, and people tell us, we do very good things for our community. Our focus is on veterans and the interfaith councils and organizations. Also, we have monthly concerts at the Main Post Chapel at the Presidio, which is our headquarters. We need help to keep doing these things. Can you help, please?

We are so pleased to announce that the exhibit of the McDonald stained-glass Windows will be on display at the Veterans Building in the Civic Center beginning with the opening on Saturday, August 27, from 4-6 pm through November 20, 2022. These windows were created from glass shards, collected by Rev. Fred McDonald when he was General Omar Bradley’s Chaplain for the troops during World War II. Rev. McDonald donated the windows to us for permanent housing in a Gallery to be built at the Chapel. The glass art has recently returned from exhibit at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans.

In addition to collaborating with all the interfaith councils in the Bay Area cities, the ICP works with these groups to help in fires, floods, and other emergencies that the communities face. For example, now several of our members are helping host Ukrainian refugees. We also help mitigate misunderstandings between religions and hold dialogues to help us understand each other better.

Please help continue this important work with your tax-deductible contribution. You may make your gift online at: www.interfaithpresidio.org/donate.html.

Sincerely,

Camilla Smith                                               Gerry Caprio

VP for Advancement                                    Executive Director

 

The Interfaith Center at the Presidio links the power of interreligious cooperation by welcoming, serving, and celebrating the diverse wisdom and faith traditions of the Bay Area. 

P.O. Box 29055, San Francisco, CA 94129

(415) 561-3930 (office) * (415) 515-5681 (cell)

www.interfaithpresidio.org * mailto:presidiointerfaith@gmail.com

Welcome to a new semester: Check out our new class guide! 🎒

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


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Program News

  • Check out our new Canadian Studies course list!
  • Farewell to research fellow Nicholas Fraser

Canadian News

  • Alberta doctor takes charges as first Indigenous president of the Canadian Medical Association

Research Opportunities

  • Call for papers: International Journal of Canadian Studies

External Events

  • Nine Canadian films at the Cinequest Film & Creativity Festival

A Message from Our Director

Dear friends,

It is my pleasure to welcome you all to another semester at Berkeley. Whether you’re a longtime friend, a faculty member, or a new or returning student, we’re so grateful to have you as part of our community. Your engagement helps us advance our mission to share knowledge of Canada with the Berkeley community and beyond – whether that’s by attending our events, submitting your research proposals, or even just subscribing to this newsletter. We are proud of the way our little community keeps growing, and we couldn’t do it without your involvement. So share us with your friends, and we hope to see you around Berkeley soon!

Warmly,

Irene Bloemraad, Program Director
PROGRAM NEWS
Check Out Our New Canadian Studies Course List!

As part of our efforts to increase education on Canada, Canadian Studies has created a new course list for Berkeley students. As an interdisciplinary program, we strongly encourage students to take classes across a variety of disciplines. Our new list highlights classes from across campus that focus on Canada and its culture, either alone or in a comparative context. The following courses are being offered this semester:

  • “Comparative Equality Law”: This course examines how the law protects equality rights in different jurisdictions. Canadian laws will be discussed in a global, comparative context.
  • “Language and Identity”: This course examines the role of language in the construction of social identities, and how language is tied to various forms of symbolic power at the national and international levels. This course will use Canada as a case study.
  • “Monsters and Modernity”: This class delves into fears and anxieties behind modern literary “monsters”, and what they say about society. Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale will be a highlighted text.
  • “Native Americans in North America to 1900”: This course will provide an ethnohistorical analysis of America’s original inhabitants and their interactions with Europeans and Euro-Americans, emphasizing an Indian perspective.

Farewell to Research Fellow Nicholas Fraser

The Canadian Studies Program wishes farewell to our 2021-22 John A. Sproul Research Fellow, Dr. Nicholas A. R. Fraser, whose one-year term ended last week. Dr. Fraser is a scholar of comparative politics, with a focus on immigration and multiculturalism. During his time at Berkeley, he conducted independent research on the impact of possible religious biases in Canadian courts. He also assisted program director Bloemraad with a long-term immigration project, and arranging speakers for our May conference. Dr. Fraser leaves Berkeley for Harvard University, where he will join the Program on U.S.-Japan Relations as a Policy Innovations Fellow. We wish him well in his new position!

CANADIAN NEWS

Alberta Doctor Takes Charges as First Indigenous President of the Canadian Medical Association

An Alberta-based physician made history this week as the first Indigenous president of Canada’s most prominent medical organization. On Monday, Dr. Alika Lafontaine, a 40-year-old anaesthesiologist from Grande Prairie, assumed the presidency of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA). Founded in 1867, the organization is the country’s largest professional association for physicians, and advocates for medical issues. Dr. Lafontaine is also the youngest-ever president in the organization’s 155-year history.

Dr. Lafontaine was born in Treaty 4 territory in southern Saskatchewan. As reported by the CBC, as a child he struggled in school due to learning challenges, poor hearing, and a stutter. His teachers dismissed him, and predicted he would be “lucky” to graduate high school. These experiences were a “huge motivator” for Lafontaine, who says he was afraid to speak out in his early years.

Lafontaine’s parents were strongly supportive of his education, and believed that his teachers were overlooking his true potential. After Lafontaine was diagnosed with a learning disability in grade school, his parents decided to homeschool him. Contrary to his teachers’ predictions, Lafontaine went on to an extraordinary academic career: he graduated high school at age 14, received his doctorate in medicine from the University of Saskatchewan at 24, and completed his residency by 28.

Dr. Lafontaine says that he hopes his personal background allows him to bring a new perspective to his role. He wants to advocate for people like himself, who felt unable to speak out. And he is making it a priority to bring communities to the table that have previously been excluded from medical discourse, or face unequal health outcomes.

A particular focus of Dr. Lafontaine’s past work has been advocating for improved healthcare in Indigenous communities. He believes that it is important for Indigenous people to see people like them in the medical field, and to normalize Indigenous people in leadership. Dr. Lafontaine previously helmed the development of a national campaign to reduce disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous patients on behalf of the Indigenous Health Alliance, and successfully secured $68 million in federal funding for the project. In 2019, he received the CMA’s Sir Charles Tupper Award for Political Advocacy for his efforts.

Dr. Lafontaine also advocates for healthcare workers, who he says are suffering from high rates of burnout due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Restoring a sense of normalcy and a healthy work-life balance are among his top priorities following years of crisis conditions at many medical centers. And as a doctor in a rural region, he also has firsthand experience with how a shortage of medical workers in many parts of Canada is exacerbating these problems, leading to hospital closures and scarcity of care. He is exploring strategies to ameliorate these problems, which he says have left medical networks in some rural areas on the brink of collapse.

RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES

Call for Papers: International Journal of Canadian Studies

Submission deadline: October 1, 2022

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is seeking interdisciplinary original submissions for its #61 special issue to be published in May 2023. This special issue welcomes articles discussing the topic: “Is Canada a model?”

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is a long-running interdisciplinary journal dedicated to examining Canada from the fields of the arts, literature, geography, history, native studies, social and political sciences. The bilingual journal is published by the University of Toronto Press.

Submissions could explore the place of Canada in the world as a possible “role model” or simply a model of society, in the past or present times. Does Canada have a power of emulation regarding other nations, regarding which topics? Is Canada a leader in some specific social or political areas? In the field of the arts and literatures, are there any Canadian literary canons?

Submissions (6000 to 8000 words plus two summaries in English and French) are welcome from a range of disciplines and perspectives in Canadian Studies, including, but not restricted to political studies, international relations literatures and the arts, history, native studies, sociology, anthropology. Submissions can be uploaded through this portal until October 1, 2022. To prepare and submit your submission, follow the “Guideline for authors”. All articles will undergo double-blind peer review. For inquiries, contact the editor (francoise.le-jeune@univ-nantes.fr).

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Nine Canadian Films at the Cinequest Film & Creativity Festival

August 16-29 | San Jose, CA | Purchase tickets here

Canada will be well represented at this year’s Cinequest Film Festival, taking place in select theaters in San Jose. Canadian submissions include CarmenLabour DayMontréal GirlsAshgroveWolvesThe FamilyTehrantoWe’re All in This Together, and Back Home Again.

Image: Natascha McElhone and Steven Love in Carmen (2022).

Canadian Studies Program
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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720