JUNO Beach Centre
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Buy a brick, and help the Branch send two of our Veterans to JUNO Beach for the opening of the JUNO Beach Centre See Betty Zarney |
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Thanks we made it. |
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The Juno Beach Canter is a memorial education facility to commemorate the contributions and sacrifices of all Canadians in WW2, at home and in all theatres of war overseas, by civilians and the military on land, sea and in the air. These contributions and sacrifices helped preserve the freedoms we enjoy today. To date there is no significant Canadian memorial that marks these events. The Centre is the dream and initiative of a group of dedicated World War 2 veterans that began more than 5 years ago. The project is being undertaken by the Jun Beach Center Association, a non-profit organization, governed by a volunteer and unpaid Board of Directors. The Juno Beach Centre is being built by donations. To date, thousands of individual Canadians and organizations have assisted. Will over half the $6.1 million required to build the Centre has been raised or pledged. The site for the Centre is at the town of Courseulles-sur-Mer on the Normandy Coast of France. The Centre is located at the site of Juno Beach- code name for the beach where Canadian forces landed on D-Day June 6, 1944 namely the Regina Rifles; Royal Winnipeg Rifles; Canadian Scottish and 1st Hussars. Governments in France have committed $1.2 million to date to support the Centre and is expected to contribute an additional $600,000 before the end of 2002. Wal Mart Canada and many other Canadian organizations and corporations have also provided significant funding support. The official opening of the Centre will take place on June 6, 2003. The Centre- and the supporting World Wide Web site- Will NOT be a museum of artifacts but rather an educational facility built around a wide variety and range of visual, audio, video and technological story themes. A special childrens circuit will be integrated into the Centre that will provide for the specific interests of those 8 to 13 years of age. |
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I would just like
to report that we have reached our goal for the Juno Beach Veterans
Trip. I want to thank all the people who helped out making this a
great success. There are so many people who helped I don't want to
miss anyone so I'll thank everyone without naming names. I especially
want to thank you the member's who keep coming out on Friday nights
to support our Mini Meat Draws and Cake Draws which are held every
third Sat. of the month. Also to all members who buy tickets for our
numerous baskets, Thank You. We couldn't have done it without your
support. The two Veterans were chosen for the Juno Beach Veterans Trip on December 20th, Friday. The Veterans are:Comrade Grant Suche and Comrade Edward Reeve.
Winners of the JUNO Beach Contest from left to right
Comrade Edward Reeve, President Eric Murphy and Comrade Grant Suche.
Betty Zarney |
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Why Support The JUNO Beach Project THEY WERE REALLY JUST GOOD MEN Bob Greene of the Chicago Tribune They werent soldiers. Thats what we tend to forget. The men who fought and died in World War ll- most of them- did not think of themselves as soldiers, or sailors, or combat aviators. At least they didnt think of themselves that way before the war started- before they were asked to leave their lives in the United States and Canada behind, to save the world. They werent soldiers- they were dentists, and mail carriers, and housepainters, and automobile mechanics, and roofers, and students, and electricians in training . They were men trying to get on with their lives, as the 1940s began- they were our fathers and grandfathers- and they didnt think of themselves as soldiers, because they werent. And then they became soldiers. Then they became something they had never aspired to be. And they did save the world. They saved it for us. The reason Im thinking about that today is that I have just spoken with a man named Damon Rarey, who is 58 years old and who lives in California. He never knew his dad. "We never actually met, put it that way," Rarey said. His father wasnt a soldier- not until 1942. His name was George Rarery although he didnt like his first name, almost everyone called him jut "Rarey"- and he was an artist. A very good one, which we will get to in a moment. He was a commercial artist and cartoonist, living with his young wife, Betty Lou, in Greenwich Village in New York City. Just about the furthest thing in the world from being a fighting man. Then came Pearl Harbour, and the letter summoning him to military service. "My father couldnt even drive a car," Damon Rarey told me. "He didnt have to, in New York. But he became a combat pilot in the Army Air Corps." That is how it worked back then. One day a young artist could be riding the subways in New York, not even having a drivers license- soon enough he would be flying fighter planes over occupied Europe. In his off hours, Capt. Rarey drew- he drew pictures of the war: his fellow pilots, the planes, the ships, the barracks, the scenes around them. He mailed them home to his wife, along with letters. He drew beautifully and he wrote beautifully. He longed to win the war and come back. He wrote one letter to his wife, about "your warmth an sweetness .Ive known these things and knowing them and having them once, I have them for forever. That wonderful look in your eyes when wed meet after being apart for a few hours- or a few weeks- always the same- full Of love. Ah, Betty Lou, youre the perfect girl for me." When Capt. Rarey went to Europe in November of 1943, his wife was pregnant. Their son- Damon- was born in March of 1944. "He never saw me," Damon said. "He knew about me, but he never saw me." George Rarey drew a picture to commemorate the day, in England, he found out he had a son. The picture shows a combat pilot sitting on a wooden chair, daydreaming; in the cartoon balloon above his head is a drawing of a woman in a maternity ward with her baby son in her arms. In the letter that he sent home with the drawing, Capt. Rarey wrote: "Betty Lou, this happiness is nigh unbearable. Got back from a mission at 4:00 this afternoon and came to the hut for a quick shave before chow. What did I see the Deacon waving at me as I walked up the road to the shack? A small yellow envelope! I quit breathing completely until the wonderful news unfolded. A son! Darling, Betty Lou!" On his 67th mission over France in support of the battles following the D-Day invasion, he died in combat. The date was June 27, 1944. He was 27 years old. On the day before he died, he wrote his wife: "I dont care for this war- I want you and Damon and life of our choosing. I want to worry about the bills- ho! Ho!- and make kites and stuff for (Damon) and his friends Ive got all these things to do and times a-wastin. I aint getting any younger, neither! So lets get this war over- okay?" They werent soldiers. Not until they had to be. They were just our fathers, before we were born. After you read this story submitted by Jeff Palmer understand the reason why we are working so hard to help raise money for the Juno Beach Centre. We are setting a goal which will be displayed in the Branch. Please buy a brick at any donation you wish to give and help with this worthwhile project. You may purchase your bricks at the bar or see Betty Zarney 831-8361 (please phone after 2:00pm). Help us reach our goal. Take a look at our Tree of Remembrance with all the bricks already donated . |