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Our Histories Are Twisted.

Heroes Remember

Our Histories Are Twisted.

Transcript
I think young people should, they should definitely know how Canada came into being, which is what I am telling these kids. They should go back in history, because I haven’t read a single Canadian history that tells it the way it really was. I lived in Quebec for many years and I have a reasonable understanding of French. And the Quebecers don’t learn history, the history of Canada, properly. It’s twisted in favour of Quebec and our histories are twisted in some other way. We don’t tell the truth to our children about how Canada got to be the way it is. And we don’t tell them about the attempts of the Americans to take this country over, the repeated attempts to do that. And we ought to tell them about the wars that Canada’s fought in this country, which they don’t apparently learn, and there’s been a few of those. Or the great wars we’ve fought overseas to defend the country indirectly. And they should know that, to explain how the country got here. I mean, there isn’t a country in the world that doesn’t have a long history behind it. And ours does too. Not as long as some, but the kids ought to know that. And then they'd know where they came from. I’m disappointed that they don’t, the fact that we don’t teach our military and correct political history to the children. Now, I guess there isn’t a single older person in Canada who wouldn’t say exactly the same thing, but the fact is, I think it ought to be done.
Description

Mr. Welland makes a plea for more in-depth, accurate and non-partisan history curricula in Canada.

Robert Welland

One of five children, Robert Welland was born in Oxbow, Saskatchewan on March 7, 1918. His parents immigrated to Canada from England, where his father had been an officer in the British Merchant Navy. Influenced by his father, Mr. Welland decided at the age of 14 that he would some day be a warship’s captain and an admiral. In 1936, he joined the Royal Canadian Navy, but had to go to England and join the Royal Navy in order to obtain officer training. His first active wartime service was aboard the F class destroyer, HMS Fame. Aboard her, he was involved in the rescue of survivors of the Athenia sinking, and the destruction of U-353. Mr. Welland then joined HMCS St. Laurent; she took part in the Dunkirk evacuation and the rescue of survivors from the Arindora Star torpedoing. In 1943, he assumed captaincy of HMCS Assiniboine; this vessel was involved both in convoy duty and harassing German shipping in the English Channel. Captain Welland remained in the Canadian Navy, and took HMCS Athabaskan into service during the Korean War, assisting in the NATO blockade there. He was later to become Commanding Officer of naval airbase CFB Shearwater, and his distinguished career saw him retire with the rank of rear admiral. He had fulfilled his boyhood dream! Mr. Welland later had great success as an entrepreneur, retiring at the age of 82.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
2:12
Person Interviewed:
Robert Welland
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Branch:
Navy
Rank:
Second Lieutenant
Occupation:
Anti-submarine officer

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