OTTAWA — An echoing peal of cannon fire signalled the start of a moment of silence Monday in St. John's, N.L., and throngs of people along the city's two main downtown streets fell quiet and bowed their heads.
Across sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½, dignitaries marked Remembrance Day by laying wreaths at ceremonies, schoolchildren sang in the late fall chill and veterans recalled the horrors of battle.
Canadians gathered in cities and towns to honour the sacrifice of men and women in uniform who gave their lives in service of the country's values and principles.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Gov. Gen. Mary Simon paid their respects in a ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.
They were joined by this year's Silver Cross Mother, Maureen Anderson of New Brunswick, whose two sons served in Afghanistan.
Sgt. Ron Anderson and Sgt. Ryan Anderson each died after a battle with post-traumatic stress disorder. Their mother represented all the mothers left behind by service members killed in the line of duty.
The mournful sound of the Last Post was heard at cenotaphs and monuments as Canadians took a moment at 11 a.m. to pay silent respects to the fallen.
"Throughout our history, the men and women of the Canadian Armed Forces have kept our country safe," Trudeau said in a social media post before the Ottawa ceremony.
"Some returned home from the battlefield and were never the same. Others never returned at all. It is a debt we can never repay, and one we will never forget."
Veterans Affairs sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ estimates the current Canadian war veteran population at 7,300 people — 6,142 men and 1,158 women — based on 2021 census data.
Royal Canadian Legion president Berkley Lawrence, 70, said the day gives people a "chance to remember what happened, how we get our freedom today."
It was the first Remembrance Day in St. John's to be held at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The soldier fought and died in France during the First World War, and was reinterred in Newfoundland this year.
Sculptor Morgan MacDonald, who made the bronze forget-me-not flowers that decorate the tomb, said it was an honour to be given such important work.
Joanne Geddes, district commander of the Nova Scotia and Nunavut legions, said she was touched to see how many people of all ages turned up despite wind and rain at the cenotaph in Halifax's Grand Parade.
Hearing the bands play and the cannons ring out brought on chills, Geddes said. "I get goosebumps. I well up. It’s emotional in a good way, in a sad way."
Paul Baiden, who served during the Cold War era, said he was thinking of mates from aircraft carrier HMCS Bonaventure "and everybody, basically, that lost their lives."
"Every day my group gets smaller," he said in Ottawa as a tear formed in his eye. "From our crew … there's maybe 20 of us left."
In the national capital, the sunny sky turned grey and light rain fell, matching the solemn mood.
Ninety-eight-year-old John Preece, who was a private in the Second World War, said it is difficult to explain what it's like to be in combat. "When you face somebody shooting at you, and you don't even know them and they don't know you. And it's not very nice, and that's all I can say. It's really a terrible scene."
John Young, a retired chief warrant officer, asked that Canadians think of troops in Latvia who have left behind spouses and children — and all the high school and kindergarten graduations they will miss.
"This is the commitment that people who wear the uniform have agreed to willingly," said Young, 66.
"I reflect on my own mother. I have no idea of the angst that she went through when both my brother and I were deployed at the same time. In her later years, she said, 'I didn’t sleep when you guys were gone.'"
Each cannon boom from a 21-gun salute set off a wave of car alarms in Montreal during a ceremony held in English, French and occasionally Mohawk.
Matthew Krisko-MacCormack brought a photo of his grandfather, First World War veteran Joseph MacCormack. He said he was thinking of people like his grandfather, who left his small P.E.I. farming community to defend home and country, and who later died as a result of injuries he suffered overseas.
Honorary Lt.-Gen. Richard Rohmer helped lead ceremonies at the Ontario Veterans' Memorial outside Queen's Park in Toronto.
The 100-year-old Rohmer told the crowd about his role helping to end the Second World War as a reconnaissance fighter pilot, taking out a key bridge in the Netherlands that trapped German forces in May 1945.
Unable to cross the river, the Germans surrendered, he recalled.
"I'm just lucky to be alive."
In Edmonton, an 11-piece pipe band's rendition of "Highland Cathedral" echoed through city hall.
Remembrance Day "is not just about speeches," said Lt.-Col. Bryn Wright, commanding officer of the Loyal Edmonton Regiment.
"It's about reflection on where we came from and what our history is, and it's about remembering those who served and fell and remembering those who continue to serve."
Neil Dancer, a retired corporal who spent time in Afghanistan with the 3rd Battalion of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, said he was heartened to see a lot of young people turn out Monday in Victoria.
Military service has taken a toll on Dancer, but he looks ahead to better days. "I have my challenges with mental health, like a lot of veterans do, but I can't complain. I have a lot of friends who are in worse situations and shape than I am."
Among those gathered at the Victory Square Cenotaph in Vancouver was Percival Smith, 101, a veteran of the British Merchant Navy who said he was "all over the place" during the Second World War.
"I went in as a boy at 17 and came out as a man at 22," he said. "The world was quite different."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 11, 2024.
— With files from Sarah Smellie in St. John's, N.L., Lyndsay Armstrong in Halifax, Morgan Lowrie in Montreal, Liam Casey in Toronto, Kyle Duggan and David Baxter in Ottawa, Aaron Sousa in Edmonton, Darryl Greer in Vancouver and Dirk Meissner in Victoria
Jim Bronskill and Laura Osman, The Canadian Press