From the CBC:
“Veterans Affairs asks for
public feedback on Canada's Afghan war monument”
Almost a decade after Canada's
combat operations in Afghanistan ended, Veterans Affairs is asking for public
feedback on five design proposals for a national monument to commemorate this
country's longest war. The veterans department has launched an online survey to
allow Canadians to evaluate concept art for the memorial, which is expected to
be constructed across from the Canadian War Museum in downtown Ottawa. Almost
two years ago, teams of artists, landscape architects, architects and other
urban design professionals were invited to provide ideas and samples of their
work. A jury of experts settled on five proposals.
The Liberal government conducted
consultations with veterans and other interested parties on the elements of the
monument. The results of those consultations, published in a report last year,
said it should "primarily commemorate and honour the ultimate sacrifice
made by those who were killed in Afghanistan." Many of those who took part
also said the sacrifices of family members should be incorporated into the
memorial. Interestingly, the report also noted that the monument needed to be
"impressive" in its size and scope and "should not be less than
other monuments because that would indicate that this mission was less significant
and that the sacrifice was seen as less significant."
The public consultation on the
design options will last until June 9 — almost 10 years to the day after the
army's last combat operation in Kandahar concluded. Canadian troops, operating
in the Panjwaii district, conducted sweeps of contested villages up to June 6,
2011, before turning the sector over to U.S. forces. The ceremonial end of the
five-year combat deployment was marked almost a month later on July 1, 2011. Four
of the five memorial proposals include some form of a wall of remembrance to
the 165 Canadian soldiers and civilians who lost their lives. The groups behind
the five designs are Team Daoust, Team Hapa, Team Lashley, Team PFS Studio and
Team Stimson.
The fact that there has been no separate
national monument to the Afghan war has been a source of controversy and
irritation among the roughly 40,000 troops who served and fought there. A
battlefield cenotaph which sat outside of the Canadian headquarters in Kandahar
now sits in a purpose-built hall outside of National Defence Headquarters in
Ottawa. Public access to it is limited by the security restrictions in place at
the complex. The former Conservative government announced plans in 2015 to
build a large, permanent national memorial in downtown Ottawa, but that project
became bogged down in disagreements over location. The matter was resolved a
few years ago when The National Capital Commission quietly announced in a news
release that a site had been chosen at Lebreton Flats in downtown Ottawa. The
national monument is not expected to be completed until the mid-2020s, at the
earliest.
^ Canada needs to have a National
Afghanistan War Memorial to remember the Canadian Men and Women that fought and
died there. I personally like either Design #1 or Design #5. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/afghan-war-monument-public-1.6041524
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