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Legion to hoist flag at National War Memorial on Remembrance Day then lower it

OTTAWA — The Royal Canadian Legion says it plans to raise the flag at the National War Memorial in Ottawa before the Remembrance Day ceremony — and then lower it again to half-mast.
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OTTAWA — The Royal Canadian Legion says it plans to raise the flag at the National War Memorial in Ottawa before the Remembrance Day ceremony — and then lower it again to half-mast.

The Legion on Friday recommended that its branches throughout Canada do the same on Nov. 11.

Lowering the flag to half-mast on Remembrance Day is one of the traditional ways Canada honours its war dead, alongside a two-minute silence and the Last Post.

The flag will be raised in the morning, and be lowered during the ceremony. It will remain lowered until sunset and will then be presented to this year’s Silver Cross mother, representing mothers who have lost children in the service of their country.

Spectators will be allowed to attend the ceremony in Ottawa if they wear a mask and socially distance.

A spokeswoman for the Legion said it was up to individual branches to decide if they want to follow its advice to raise the flag at branches or local cenotaphs before lowering it. She said they could choose whether to keep the flag at half-mast after Remembrance Day.

The flag has been flying at half-mast at federal buildings since late May. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asked for it to be lowered after the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc announced that ground-penetrating radar had located what are believed to be the remains of 215 children in unmarked graves at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C.

Canadian Heritage says flags at government buildings and the Peace Tower remain lowered in memory of Indigenous children who died attending residential schools, as well as survivors and their families.

The department said on Friday that unless the prime minister decides to return the flag to full mast before Remembrance Day, it will remain at half-mast on that day instead of being hoisted up and lowered to half-mast again.

“If a half-masting notice is already in effect for federal buildings and establishments when another half-masting notice — whether mandatory or discretionary — is issued, no action in relation to the national flag of Canada is required,” the department wrote in a statement.

The discovery of unmarked graves at residential schools, including 751 unmarked graves found by Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan, sent waves of shock and grief across the country.

On Remembrance Day, the Legion is in charge of an annual ceremony marking the sacrifice of Canadians for their country. It has the right to decide how the flag is presented at the National Memorial on Nov. 11.

“There is a Canadian flag and a British Union flag at the National War Memorial. On Nov. 11, the Legion controls the site and the two flags and will follow Legion protocol. This means the flags will be fully hoisted before the ceremony and will be lowered to half-mast during the ceremony,” said Nujma Bond, Legion spokeswoman.

The ceremony is marked at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11 — the time and date of the armistice in the First World War — and includes a two-minute silence and the laying of wreaths by the armed services, veterans and politicians. The ceremony will include a recitation in an Indigenous language.

The Royal Canadian Legion on Friday recommended that Legion branches around the country also hoist the flag before the Remembrance Day ceremony so it can be lowered in tribute, but said a final decision is up to them.

“If branches and/or commands determine they will follow the recommendation from national headquarters, then after Remembrance Day, they may opt to lower their flags once again — it will be an individual command and branch decision,” Bond said.

After Nov. 11, it is up to the government to again decide if the flag stays lowered at the Ottawa memorial.

Canadian Heritage posts notices every time the flag is lowered to half-mast and the current one says it will stay that way until “further notice.”

It says the decision about when to raise up the flag lies with Trudeau.

The prime minister has said he plans to keep it lowered until Indigenous Peoples want to see Canada’s flag flying fully hoisted.

On Friday, during an official visit to the Netherlands, Trudeau visited a cemetery where Canadian soldiers are buried. During the Second World War more than 7,500 Canadian soldiers were killed as part of the Allied effort to liberate the Netherlands from the Nazis.

Trudeau, who was wearing a poppy in his lapel, said at a news conference in the Netherlands that Canada had “created deep and long-lasting ties of friendship with the Netherlands” during the Second World War.

On Remembrance Day, a peal of bells will ring out from the Peace Tower in Ottawa. The carillon — a piano-like instrument linked to over 50 bells in the tower — will begin playing at 9:50 a.m. The carillon was installed in 1927 to remember the fallen in the First World War.

This summer, The Royal Canadian Legion held an official period of recognition and mourning after the discovery of children’s remains near residential schools in Canada.

Communities around the country will honour their war dead on Nov. 11. Traditionally, Canadian flags flown at Legion branches or cenotaphs are flown at full-mast until the playing of the first note of the Last Post bugle call, and then lowered.

Flags are raised to the full-mast position on the first note of the Rouse bugle call, remaining at full mast during the playing of the Royal Anthem.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 29, 2021.

Marie Woolf, The Canadian Press

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version erroneously reported the Department of Canadian Heritage said the national flag will remain at half-mast leading up to Remembrance Day.