Monthly Archives: January 2024

The Langemarck Myth: How WW I Germany turned loss into propaganda victory

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Stephen J. Thorne

The Langemarck Myth: How WW I Germany turned loss into propaganda victory

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Eleven kilometres north of the First World War icon of Ypres in Flanders, Belgium, more than 44,000 Germans lie buried in a sprawling walled cemetery at the site from which the Kaiser’s army launched the first gas attack in modern warfare.

The remains of 24,917 German war dead rest in a mass grave alongside the entrance to Langemarck German war cemetery, including flying ace Werner Voss, a squadron mate and close friend of Manfred von Richthofen (the Red Baron).

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Military Milestones
Military Milestones

Wikimedia

The Second World War’s strangest weapon

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

At the end of the Second World War, Japan dreamt up one of the most bizarre weapons of early 20th-century warfare. It launched 9,000 of them across the Pacific Ocean from November 1944 to April 1945 and the idea was as unexpected as it was inefficient; it had created the balloon bomb.

They aren’t often seen as dangerous weapons, but Japanese balloon bombs, called Fu-Go, were diabolical—at least in theory. Carrying a 33-pound fragmentation shell, the device was meant to cause widespread fire, essentially aiming to wreak havoc on American morale and the North American war effort when delivered in great numbers. Only 10 per cent of them reached the continent, however. And on Jan. 12, 1945, a teenager spotted one of the floating bombs near Regina, the first of eight to land in Saskatchewan.

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Arbor Alliance

Happy New Year! 🎉​ Our Spring events lineup is here!

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


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • Negotiating the “Double-Minded Vocabulaire”: Montreal’s Jewish Communities and Contemporary Quebec
  • Preview our Spring calendar!

Academic Opportunities

  • Call for papers: Populations rendered “surplus” in Canada

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UPCOMING EVENTS

Negotiating the “Double-Minded Vocabulaire”: Montreal’s Jewish Communities and Contemporary Quebec

Tues., January 30 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

Montreal’s 90,000-strong Jewish community presents unique features that differentiate it from the Jewish populations of other North American cities. Even those aspects that it shares – a large Ashkenazic immigration in the early 20th century, broad and successful upward mobility, and the development of strong educational, cultural, and service institutions – have been achieved in a city once divided by language, religion, and geography (the English-speaking, largely Protestant business west versus the French-speaking, overwhelmingly Catholic proletarian and lower middle-class east), now a secular, multicultural metropolis whose official language is French but with the highest rate of citizens who speak at least three languages of any North American city. The departure of many Ashkenazic Jews in the 1970s and 80s in the face of the Quebec independence movement has been partially offset by the arrival, since the 1950s, of Sephardic Jews, at first from North Africa, and more recently from Israel and France. At the same time, Montreal received one of the world’s largest populations of Holocaust survivors and has become a world center for Hasidic Judaism.

Today, Montreal Jewish institutions speak increasingly of the city’s Jewish communities, in recognition of this remarkable internal diversity. How do these developments challenge the vision and missions of Montreal’s historical Jewish institutions? How is the question of Jewish identity in Montreal shaped by the concern in Quebec for the flourishing of the French language and the codification into law of a concept of laïcité, or secularism, more in line with European views than with the prevailing notions of multiculturalism in North America? How do Montreal’s Jewish communities articulate their identities and sentiments of belonging in response to the range of ways, variously inclusive and exclusive, that Quebec identity is asserted in the linguistic, cultural, and political spheres?

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dr. Robert Schwartzwald is a professor in the Département de littératures et de langues du monde at the Université de Montréal, where he directed the graduate certificate program in Jewish studies from 2016-2022. He received his M.A. in comparative literature from the University of Toronto, and a Ph.D. in Québécois literature from Université Laval. His publications explore interfaces between literary and national articulations of modernity with special attention to issues of sexual representation and intercultural relations. He is a former editor of the International Journal of Canadian Studies / Revue internationale d’études canadiennes and a recipient of the Governor-General’s International Award for Canadian Studies.

This event is cosponsored by the Center for Jewish Studies and Department of French.

… And save the date for these other great events!

March 2: Program director Richard A. Rhodes will lead a conference celebrating the release of the late David Pentland’s Proto-Algonquian Dictionary.

March 12: Agricultural economist Catherine Keske (UC Merced) will discuss her research on creating a secure, sustainable, and just food system in the boreal ecosystems of Newfoundland and Labrador.

April 16: Historian Jarett Henderson (UC Santa Barbara) will talk about what the criminalization of male-male sexuality in 19th-century Canada reveals about the politics of gender and settler masculinity under colonial rule.

April 30: Grad student Hildebrand Fellows Claire Chun and Madeleine Morris will give short presentations on their Canadian Studies-funded research into how Canadian visual artists grapple with the complexities of national and ethnic identity.

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

Call For Papers: Populations Rendered “Surplus” in Canada

Deadline: April 15, 2024

Social Sciences, an open-access, peer-reviewed journal, has put out a call for papers for a special edition in Canadian studies. Titled Populations Rendered “Surplus” in Canada, this issue seeks to address the challenges faced by Canada’s displaced, marginalized, erased, racialized, and disadvantaged populations.

The edition will be guest edited by Christina Keppie, director for the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University. Submissions from all fields and disciplines related to the social sciences are encouraged, and a multi- or interdisciplinary approach is welcome.

Click here to learn more.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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

RCAF Association Update

As many of our member are former air force, and several of these events are virtual or have an online component, we wanted to pass this information along.


Please accept the best of wishes for a Happy New Year from all your fellow members of the RCAF Association. We also extend these wishes to all of our important stakeholders – those with a vested interest in the success of our organization, and in what we can do for you.

2024

It is here; the centennial year during which we will mark the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Royal Canadian Air Force. If you are a leader or member of one of our many RCAF Association Wings or if you are a member-at-large, if you are planning or anticipating activities to take place in your community, please share details with director@airforce.ca at your earliest opportunity. We are somewhat aware of plans underway in Kingston (416) and Trenton (413) and London (427) and Kitchener-Waterloo (404) and North Bay (422) and 102 (Truro) and 306 (Montreal) and 302 (Quebec City) and Calgary (783) and Comox (888) and Nanaimo (808), but we are short on details. If you can please share. The Minister of Veterans Affairs and the Association Minister of National Defence will be visiting the RCAF Association later next week to hear about your activities, and to learn more about the RCAF Association everywhere throughout Canada.

RCAF Ball 2024

The RCAF Ball will take place on 1 June 2024 in Ottawa at the Infinity Conference Centre. Ticket sales are anticipated to begin mid-February 2024.

Air Force Day on Parliament Hill 2024

The annual Advocacy Reception – Air Force Day on Parliament Hill 2024 will take place on Tuesday 21 May 2024 in Ottawa at the Sir John A Macdonald Building. The Commander RCAF and party of 65 will join aerospace industry representatives and parliamentarians to learn from each other of the issues that underscore important civilian and military aerospace decisions.

RCAF 2024 Run

The RCAF 2024 Run will be held from 31 May to 16 June 2024. You can follow all the outcomes and activities in the run, here at this link. The Executive Director is registered again, this year; Dean Black’s page can be viewed here at this link, if you would like to donate to the RCAF Centennial Fund by “sponsoring” Dean’s run. Supporters helped raise more than $2,000 last year and this put the RCAF Association at the top of the winner’s list with the highest supporting donations to a participant. Thank you everyone.

Newsletters and Bulletins

We continue to share all Wing bulletins and newsletters sent to us in PDF. Members interested in Wing activities across the country can visit the following website to view for free all of the various newsletters and bulletins shared with us here. Visit this link: https://www.magloft.com/app/rcafmag/

Revue Airforce Magazine

Volume 47 No 3 has been published – a digital format is available at https://www.magloft.com/app/rcafmag/   and accessible for those digital subscribers, who can also view their magazine (and free newseltters and bulletings) through the AppleStore and GooglePlay apps on their mobile phones. The hardcopy of the magazine is now with the printers – all proofs have been approved, and the magazine should begin mailing after 18 January 2024.

Election Results

Thank you to all who participated in the 2023 general elections on-line, recently. The results have been shared with the Chairman of the RCAF Association Board of Directors and a communiqué/announcement should be released in the coming days.

Questions may be directed to director@airforce.ca

 

Royal Canadian Air Force Association,405-222 Somerset St. West Ottawa ON K2P 2G3 CANADA, Phone Number:(613) 232-4281, Fax Number: (613) 232-2156, Email Address: director@airforce.ca, Website : http://rcafassociation.ca