Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
Ya know... I was actually in Afghanistan for all of 2006.
I traveled from Kandahar to Gardez to Ghazni to Sharana to Zormot to Bagram to WazaKwa.
We went up and down the entire east side of the country at least once a month.
Kinda odd, but I didn't see a single Canadian outside of Bagram's chow halls.
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Unlike y ou, I have not been to Afghanistan. I'm just a working stiff in Toronto. But I have pulled over to the side of the 401 high way - AKA the Highway of Heroes on several occasions as the motorcade of hearses bearing our soldiers passes by. Every overpass along this highway is filled with emergency response vehicles with their lights wig-waging, civilians holding up flags, veterans saluting as the procession heads down to the coroner's building downtown.
You may not have seen these guys, but I know they've been there, and have made the ulitmate sacrifice.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNew...0824/20070824/
Quote:
'Highway of Heroes'
Updated Fri. Aug. 24 2007 1:34 PM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
The stretch of Highway 401 running from Trenton, Ont., to Toronto will be officially renamed the Highway of Heroes in remembrance of Canada's fallen soldiers.
Ontario's provincial government consulted the federal government, municipalities along the highway and the Royal Canadian Legion about the name change on Friday.
The highway will not lose its official designation at the MacDonald-Cartier Freeway, but signs will be erected designating the route as the Highway of Heroes.
The design of the signs has yet to be determined.
The man behind the online petition in support of renaming a section of Canada's busiest highway says he has been overwhelmed by the response.
Jay Forbes had been receiving between 400 and 500 signatures a day in support of the name "Highway of Heroes" but the amount of people signing the petition has rapidly increased over the last few days.
"In the first four days I had 4,500 signatures," Forbes told CTV's Canada AM on Friday morning. "But now...I (have) 20,000."
Forbes decided to create the petition after seeing positive feedback toward an article on the Internet about renaming a section of Highway 401 the Highway of Heroes.
"I just had enough time and I whipped up a petition," Forbes said.
The support for the petition has come at a time when, residents, police officers and firefighters have been gathering to salute and wave flags on Highway 401 overpasses while motorcades carrying the bodies of soldiers killed in Afghanistan make their way to the coroner's office in Toronto.
Forbes' actions have been supported by retired Lt.-Col. Peter Dawe, whose son Capt. Matthew Dawe was killed in Afghanistan in July.
Dawe said that his son would have been supportive of renaming a section of the highway.
"I think there's a need for Canadians to show support for the troops to recognize the sacrifice," Dawe said.
It would also provide healing and support families of fallen soldiers, he said.
"At the same time I think we need to keep our eye on the rest of the military who are putting it on the line for our great country every day," Dawe said. "So somehow, you've got to balance that."
Nevertheless, Dawe feels the support from a cross-section of Canadians gathering on the highway overpasses is an "incredible phenomenon."
It's a show of support that the creator of the petition has successfully transferred to the online realm.
"It's truly amazing to see and it just goes to show how many people do support the troops in Canada," Forbes said. "It's just great."
With files from The Canadian Press
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