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Remembrance Day ceremony held at Grand Parade in Halifax

WATCH: After two years of pandemic restrictions, hundreds of people showed up to Grand Parade for the main Remembrance Day service in Halifax Friday. It was a chance for people to honour those who have fought for our freedom, those who have been lost, and those still serving. Callum Smith has the story – Nov 11, 2022

Thousands of people honoured the country’s war dead during Remembrance Day ceremonies held on Friday in towns and cities across Atlantic Canada.

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A large crowd gathered in warm sunshine on the Grand Parade in front of Halifax City Hall where military formations stood at attention in front of the cenotaph. The mournful sounds of the Last Post bugle call sounded out amid the firing of an artillery gun salute from nearby Citadel Hill.

Nova Scotia Lt.-Gov. Arthur LeBlanc was among the dignitaries in attendance, as were Charlotte and Lloyd Smith, parents of Pte. Nathan Smith, who was an infantryman with the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry.

Smith was among the first Canadian soldiers to die in the Afghanistan war, on April 17, 2002, and his parents are recipients of the Memorial Cross of Canada.

“I have so many people say to me at times, ‘how do you ever get over it?'” Lloyd Smith said following the ceremony. “The truth is, you don’t; you never get over it. I still break down 22 years later.”

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A woman pays her respects at Remembrance Day ceremonies at the Grand Parade in Halifax on Friday, Nov. 11, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

Smith said he was shocked when his son joined the military, but he added that Nathan quickly excelled during training and grew to love his job as a soldier. “It was something he really wanted to do … he did a good job and I’m proud of him.”

Smith said he was impressed by the number of people who turned out to remember the men and women who served their country.

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“It’s great to see the crowd,” he said. “It gives us a great feeling, and we are very appreciative of the people who do take the time to come out.”

One of the people who attended was 17-year-old Abby Titus, a Grade 12 student from Halifax who said the importance of Remembrance Day is not lost on young people. The effects of war are still being felt, she said, because of ongoing world conflicts.

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“It’s been almost 100 years since World War Two and over 100 years since World War One, and (war) is still affecting us as a country and as a world,” Titus said. “It might be our history, but we are very much living it today.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 11, 2022.

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