B.C. falls silent at Remembrance Day services, where family ties hold strong
Remembrance Day services across British Columbia fell silent for two minutes to honour the sacrifice of war and military veterans, with some attendees reflecting on traditions of service running through their families.
Retired RCMP sergeant Don Bindon, who attended the service at Victory Square in Vancouver dressed in the red serge uniform, said his son is in the army and his father also served in the army during the Second World War.
Bindon said he marches every year that he can, to honour the “awful lot of very good men and women” who have died in war on behalf of Canadians.
Ceremonies were held across the province Tuesday, with flyovers from Royal Canadian Air Force aircraft in the B.C. Interior, on Vancouver Island, and at the service at Victory Square, where a Sikorsky Cyclone helicopter roared overhead at the site of Vancouver’s annual ceremony since 1924.


