Author Archives: Michael K. Barbour

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About Michael K. Barbour

Michael K. Barbour is the Director of Faculty Development and a Professor of Instructional Design for the College of Education and Health Sciences at Touro University California. He has been involved with K-12 online learning in a variety of countries for well over a decade as a researcher, teacher, course designer and administrator. Michael's research focuses on the effective design, delivery and support of K-12 online learning, particularly for students located in rural jurisdictions.

Celebrate Thanksgiving with a virtual wine tasting

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.  The annual Canadian Thanksgiving event that the Digital Moose Lounge and the Canadian Studies Program at UC Berkeley host is traditionally the unofficial beginning to our annual Poppy Campaign.  So we will be missing that this year with these virtual events.


CELEBRATE THANKSGIVING, CANADIAN-STYLE!

Our friends at Kascadia Wines are offering a virtual wine tasting in celebration of Canadian Thanksgiving on Thursday, October 8th from 4:30 to 6 p.m. In order to ship in time, Pre-orders are now open until October 1st! 
You’ll receive a special tasting duo from BC’s Winemakers CUT. Then, meet the proprietor/winemaker along with new and old friends. We loved our Canada Week gathering and can’t wait to see who can join this time.

Purchase your exclusive $70 DML wine tasting package (taxes extra, but shipping included!) no later than October 1st (also available in these states)

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Where to buy a turkey in October???

That wine tasting might have you thinking about your Thanksgiving dinner table….Ah! The perennial problem of where to find a turkey a month before our American brethren celebrate their Day of Thanks. DML Board member, Hugh Morgan has tackled the subject handily and talks turkey, including where to find said bird.
https://www.digitalmooselounge.org/blog/ask-a-canadian-where-to-buy-a-turkey-for-thanksgiving

Freelance opportunity: The DML needs a web developer. As we transition our website to WordPress, we are looking for someone to help transfer archived content from our CRM (Keystone) to WordPress. If you – or someone you know – can help, please contact Wendy: wendykammarcy@gmail.com

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Do You Have A Story Like This We Can Share?

For those folks that may be participating in this virtual run, I’d encourage you to submit something.


Do You Have A Story Like This We Can Share?

Remembrance Day Races are three Virtual Running & Walking Events to Benefit the Juno Beach Centre, Canada’s Second World War Museum and Cultural Centre located in Normandy, France. $10 from every registration goes directly to the Juno Beach Centre.
Choose one of three Historically Significant Distances and then run or walk to honour a family member who served, or in memory of the Canadians and the sacrifices they made in Normandy -just like Rob McGuire is doing. Here is Rob’s story…
Virtual Remembrance Day Race 2020; Honouring My Dad, George McGuire
As a runner, I’m always looking for some form of inspiration whenever I run a race. The inspiration for the Virtual Remembrance Day run was easy to find: My late dad, George McGuire. 
 
Dad joined the Canadian Army in Toronto in 1942 when he was 19. After basic training and a year in Canada (where he was an instructor in Newmarket, attended courses in Woodstock for right handed driving and motorcycle riding, along with further training in Aldershot, NS), dad was shipped to England in 1943. Interestingly, dad always commented on the 20 mile marches and runs they did, in full kit!! That’s why I don’t complain about being tired when I’m running a race….I’m not wearing 25kg of gear, boots and a wool uniform!! 
 
So how did he end up on Juno Beach? As dad told me in 2016, some fellow broke his leg on a training exercise in England. Dad, who was a clerk and a corporal, was assigned to take his place. On June 10, 1944, dad landed on Juno Beach. The ramp to the landing craft didn’t work so they were ordered over the side into the surf. When dad walked onto the beach, he says he was ushered onto a truck by a sergeant who ‘welcomed’ him into the Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada (QORC). 
 
Dad spent the rest of the war with the QORC as a clerk in the headquarters company, being discharged as a sergeant in 1946. While he was in France, he told me that some nights he’d be sleeping in a ditch with his rifle in one arm and his typewriter in the other, listening to the sounds of artillery duels. He said that one of his duties was to take dictation from the company commander whenever a soldier had been wounded or killed. Each letter was written in personal manner and not in a ‘cookie cutter’ style. 
 
One of his most profound moments in France occurred when a jeep ambulance (a jeep converted to carry stretchers) returned to his camp after a skirmish. Two of the men on the stretchers had been killed in the fighting shortly after leaving the camp a few hours before. Dad always commented that he never understood how you could be alive in the morning and dead by lunch. 
 
In early 2016, my sister learned that the Government of France was honouring Canadians who had participated in the liberation of their country. She did the leg work in filling out the forms and proving dad’s contribution to the campaign. On June 30, 2016, dad was awarded France’s Legionne d’honneur (Chevalier Rank) by the French Consul and his Aide de Camp, both based in Toronto. They travelled to dad’s retirement home in Burlington for a very dignified ceremony. (I have included a couple of photos from this.) After the medal had been presented, dad stated to the attendees, “I accept this medal on behalf of those who never made it home.” 
 
My dad was always humble about his contributions to the war effort, frequently stating, “I didn’t do much.” In the speech that I wrote for this investiture and in 2018 for his eulogy, I commented on his assertion that he hadn’t done much. I made sure he and others knew that to put one soldier on the front lines took 10-15 people in the rear to support him. Dad’s contribution with typewriter mattered just as much as anyone else’s. 
 
The year before, I had visited Juno Beach and The Juno Beach Centre, on June 25, 2015. I was able to stand in front of Queen’s Own Rifles House, the iconic building seen in so many photos from D-Day. That house marked the landing point for the regiment on June 6, 1944. That was a very proud moment and moving day for me. I thought of my dad’s service and the sacrifice of so many Canadians who had been 
wounded or killed in the liberation of France. I wondered on that day, if I was standing in the same place where my dad had landed, 71 years prior. 
 
Dad died in 2018 when he was 95. My sister and I had nicknamed him ‘The Iron Veteran’, as he had bounced back from so many falls and illnesses in his later years. However, the last fall finally became the one from which he could not recover. 
 
I’ll do my 21.1k ‘Virtual Remembrance Day Race’ as a walk on October 4, marching from Fort George in Niagara on the Lake to Brock’s Monument, a distance of 22k. There will be nearly 20 people on this march, all dressed in uniforms of the British Army and clothing of the period, commemorating the Battle of Queenston Heights (Oct 12, 1812). As historical reenactors for the War of 1812, it is our passion and privilege to honour our history. On this march, I am proud to be raising funds for the Juno Beach Centre, while honouring my dad’s service and contribution towards the liberation of the people of France. 
 
It will be my part of the ‘leg work’ needed to ensure “We Will Remember Them!” 
Pictured above is George McGuire in 1942 in his Canadian Army uniform and George McGuire in 2016 at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum.
Register now for one of the Remembrance Day Races Virtual Running or Walking Events to Benefit Juno Beach Centre. 
Click here to visit junobeach.org for more veterans’ stories.
Each virtual race kit includes the incredible, over-sized, commemorative medal (shown above), as well as a beautifully imprinted neck gaitor or mask, a Remembrance Day poppy, a Juno Beach D-Day souvenir map, a keepsake race bib, and more!
Choose one of three Historically Significant Distances:
StrongPoint 1500m, Juno Beach 8K, or Remembrance 21.1K
and then share with us the story of your run or walk to honour a family member or the memory of those Canadians who served.
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Prof. Bloemraad interviewed on citizenship & belonging; Migrant worker rights during COVID

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


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Event next week: Migrant farmworker rights during COVID-19
  • In the news: Prof. Bloemraad interviewed on immigration podcast
  • Upcoming event: Hildebrand Graduate Research Colloquium
NEXT TUESDAY
Social Movements and Legal Mobilisation in Times of Crisis: Migrant Farm Worker Rights in Canada
Lecture | October 6 | 12:30 p.m. | Online – RSVP here
The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected migrant farm workers. Former Hildebrand Fellow Vasanthi Venkatesh, a professor of law at the University of Windsor specializing in social movements and immigration, gives context to the crisis by showing how the pandemic has overlaid itself onto existing systemic racial discrimination against migrant farm workers embedded in law and policy. She also shows how migrant farm worker advocates have responded to the crisis by exposing the racial capitalism of the Canadian agricultural economy, using radical narratives to challenge these systems.
RSVP to canada@berkeley.edu to receive a webcast link.
In the News
Prof. Bloemraad Talks Immigration on Popular Podcast
Canadian Studies director Irene Bloemraad recently appeared as a guest expert on the podcast How to Talk to [Mami & Papi] About Anything. The podcast is hosted by Juleyka Lantigua-Williams, a former producer of NPR’s Code Switch, and is aimed at adult children of immigrants, with a goal of “help{ing} them with difficult, but necessary conversations.”
Professor Bloemraad appears in Ep. 21, “The Mixed Privilege of Being A White Immigrant”. She provides context to one woman’s experience as the daughter of an immigrant in the United States and later an immigrant herself in Canada, exploring the complex meanings of citizenship and what it means to belong in a country. The official episode summary is below; listen online at talktomamipapi.com.
Vanessa’s mother moved from Germany to the U.S. as an adult. Vanessa, who was born in the U.S., immigrated to Canada and finds herself comparing their experiences in their adopted countries as she watches her home country from The North. Then, Juleyka speaks with a sociologist who puts citizenship and belonging into a larger context.
Upcoming Events
Hildebrand Graduate Research Colloquium
Colloquium | October 20 | 12:30 p.m. | Online – RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. Participating scholars are Desirée Valadares, (“Idling No More: Reading Japanese Canadian World War II Road Camps Alongside Specters of Indigeneity on the Hope-Princeton Highway in British Columbia, Canada”) and Martha Herrera-Lasso Gonzalez (“Regionalizing NAFTA: Theaters of Translation in Mexico City and Quebec”).
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Are you ready to be inspired?

Another virtual run opportunity to support the organization formerly known as the There But Not There organization


ARE YOU READY FOR THE TOMMY 10K?

 Get moving, challenge yourself and raise vital funds for our most vulnerable veterans.

What is the Tommy 10k? You can walk, run or wheel 10k between the 14th October – 14th November. There are various different difficulty levels depending on your fitness and ability. We have something for everyone!  🏃

It’s free to take part and you get a free Tommy 10k technical t-shirt. Join our Facebook community of others taking part in the event, swapping tips, tricks and motivation. 🎽

 All we ask is that you set up a fundraising page and share with your friends and family. 👍

FIND OUT MORE

WE ASKED YOU, HOW WILL YOU REMEMBER THEM?

AND YOU REPLIED…

Sapper Thomas Henry Frewer served in 295 Army Field Coy Royal Engineers, and was sadly was killed in action 17th September 1942 at El-Alamein, aged 22.There is no grave for family to go to, but they have been to the El-Alamein cemetery & laid a wreath at the memorial with his name on.

Thank you Val Alderidge for sharing the poignant and lasting memory of your uncle.

“In remembrance of both our parents who were in WW2.”
An Unknown Tommy stand proudly outside the house of Jenny & Nick. A daily reminder of those who gave their tomorrow for our today.

Lest we forget.

SHARE YOUR TOMMIES WITH US

LEAVE A LASTING LEGACY ON OUR WALL OF HONOUR

We want you to come together, share this experience and preserve a memory for future generations.

The Wall of Honour, in RBLI’s historic memorial garden, gives you the opportunity to have your name, family, a friend or loved one, engraved onto a commemorative plaque.

‘HELP US REMEMBER THOSE WHO GAVE THEIR YESTERDAYS FOR OUR TODAYS’

For support from our fundraising team please email fundraising@rbli.co.uk
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