Two in ten (20%) Canadians say they will attend an official
Remembrance Day
service on
November 11th
this year - Up from 16% in 2008
TORONTO
,
Nov. 9
/CNW/ - More Canadians will actively observe
Remembrance Day
this year than last, says a new survey for The Historica-Dominion Institute. The poll, conducted by Ipsos Reid, examines attitudes toward remembrance among Canadian as well their personal connection to veterans and the military.
Two in ten (20%) Canadians - some 4.8 million adults - say they will attend an official
Remembrance Day
service on
November 11th
. In 2008, 16% of Canadians - some 4 million adults - say they attended an official service on
Remembrance Day
. Projected attendance this year rises to 26% among those who have a family member who has served in the past, and to 35% among those who now have a family member in the Canadian Forces.
The Historica-Dominion Institute has asked all Canadians - at home, at school, at work - to stop for two minutes at eleven o'clock on
November 11
in a nation-wide campaign called "Take Two Minutes to Remember." More than 1,600 Canadians and organizations have signed up at www.historica-dominion.ca. On
November 5
, the House of Commons unanimously adopted a motion urging all Canadians to observe two minutes of silence.
The proposal enjoys widespread support among Canadians. All in all, more than eight in ten (85%) respondents agree (57% strongly/28% somewhat) that they will observe two minutes of silence at 11 o'clock on
November 11th
. Furthermore, seven in ten (71%) Canadians 'agree' (44% strongly/27% somewhat) that 'governments at the federal, provincial and municipal levels should make it mandatory, not voluntary, for individuals, schools, workplaces and other venues to observe two minutes of silence on each November 11'.
"We hope all Canadians - even those who will not be attending a
Remembrance Day
ceremony - will join us in taking two minutes to remember at
11 a.m.
on November 11," says
Andrew Cohen
, president of The Historica-Dominion Institute. "This is simple way for all of us to honour the men and women who have served and continue to serve our country."
The survey also measured Canadians' direct connection with veterans and the Canadian Forces. A majority (54%) of those polled - which could represent roughly 13 million adult Canadians - say they have a direct relative who has served as a member of the Canadians Forces during a war or a conflict, or as a member of Canada's uniformed reserves:
- Over 3 million adult Canadians (14%) have a direct relative who they
know served in World War One.
- Some 10 million adult Canadians (43%) have a direct relative who
served in World War Two.
- Over 3 million adult Canadians (14%) say that they have a member of
their family or direct relative who is currently an active-serving
member of the Canadian Forces.
- Approximately 1.7 million adult Canadians (7%) have a direct relative
who served or is serving in Afghanistan.
The Historica-Dominion Institute is a national charitable organization launched on
September 1, 2009
. It was created out of two organizations: The Historica Foundation of
Canada
and The Dominion Institute. It is the country's leading advocate of memory, identity and democracy, dedicated to promoting a greater understanding of Canada's history and the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. Some of its signature programs are Encounters with
Canada
, The Memory Project, Passages to
Canada
and The Canadian Encyclopedia.
For detailed survey results, visit www.historica-dominion.ca.
For further information: Media Inquiries: Andrew Cohen, President, (613) 875-2576, [email protected]; Marc Chalifoux, Executive Vice-President, (416) 602-9721, [email protected]
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