Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

RCMP memorial service remembers Const. Sarah Beckett who died in line of duty

WATCH ABOVE: It was a sombre day for RCMP officers as they gathered at the RCMP Depot for the national memorial service. The yearly event commemorates those who have lost their lives while on duty. There had been 236 to date, but as Christa Dao reports, today one more name was inscribed on the cenotaph. – Sep 11, 2016

The yearly event remembers RCMP members who have lost their lives while on duty. This year, one more name was inscribed on the cenotaph.

Story continues below advertisement

Thirty-two-year-old Const. Sarah Ann Beckett was killed in a motor vehicle accident in Langford, B.C in April.

Beckett’s death brings the total to 237 people who have lost their lives while in uniform.

READ MORE: BC’s police watchdog investigating crash that killed RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

“We need to keep their memory (alive) and to do that, every year we have the ceremony on the second Sunday of every September,” RCMP “Depot” Division representative 2-Sgt. Janie Perrault said.

“We need to honour them, pay respect to them.”

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

Saskatchewan’s Lieutenant Governor Vaughn Solomon Schofield joined RCMP commissioner Bob Paulson and a family representative in laying wreaths at the base of the cenotaph, in honour of Const. Beckett.

“It’s important for the families who are here. It’s important for the people who have died and it’s important for the cadets too, to learn what people have done,” Perrault explained.

Story continues below advertisement

Bob Buday is a representative for families of the deceased. On Sunday, Buday is reminded of his brother, Const. Michael Buday. He was killed in action over 30 years ago.

READ MORE: Terrace names park in honour of fallen RCMP officer Mike Buday

“I have to say it gets easier, but something can trigger it. When I was in Terrace, just seeing all the members there, the dog team, it triggered. All of a sudden I was back in the cemetery in 1985,” he remembered.

Buday said he understands what families go through. He said the loss of a family member is a cross he carries as well.

He said the memorial service can help heal those deep wounds.

“I’ve seen what it does for families and we need this,” he said.

Story continues below advertisement

“We need to come together once a year and share and renew. It’s been a very positive thing.”

Buday said the annual memorial serves as a reminder of the 237 brave men and women who paid the ultimate sacrifice for Canada.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article