Stories, poems and music prominent in North Battleford Remembrance Day service
Speaking to a packed auditorium at the Don Ross Community Centre on Saturday, Rev. Trevor Maylon of the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 70 evoked images of a sandy seaside surrounded by barbwire and machine gun fortified desolation one June day in Normandy when he spoke of how the Regina Rifles, affectionately known as Farmers Johns, helped liberate France and Belgium that fateful summer on Juno Beach.
“These soldiers had prepared for a number of years for this particular day,” he said, noting they were joined on that hellish landscape by Royal Winnipeg Rifles, the Sixth Canadian Armoured Regiment (1st Hussars) and others on June 6, 1944.
“These were the first soldiers to battle their way into France, to topple the tyranny of the German Nazi Regime.”
In Malyon’s Remembrance Day address, aptly titled “The Battle Close to Home” he shared the history of those young everyday farmers, fur trappers and students who, like so many others, left their homes to wage the battle for freedom.