‘Why do we just put up plaques?’ How this school is doing more to remember Canadian military heroes

The Cpl. François (Franck) Dupéré Legacy Memorial is soon start what is intended to be a 100-year journey around high schools in Canada, gaining a new soldier’s name at each

It is unusual for a war memorial to look to the future.

Military tributes and honours normally look back to the past, whether they are grand installations such as cenotaphs or Ottawa’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, or more personal awards like Canada’s military valour distinctions.

The Corporal François (Franck) Dupéré Legacy Memorial, built of wood with metal accents ambitiously engraved “11 November 2023 — November 11, 2123,” is soon to be shipped to the King’s-Edgehill School in Nova Scotia on the first leg of what is intended to be a 100-year journey around high schools in Canada, gaining a new soldier’s name to remember at each one.

Franck Dupéré.
Canadian veteran Franck Dupéré in February 2013.Photo by Colin O’Connor for National Post

These students, under the guidance of Daniel Johnson, whose title is “Spiritual Care and Guidance, and Community Involvement Animator,” have a history of being unsatisfied with perfunctory displays of remembrance that are soon forgotten.

More than a decade ago, for example, the late National Post journalist and celebrated military chronicler Christie Blatchford took note of their “absolutely remarkable” efforts to memorialize Sergeant Chris Karigiannis, an alumnus of their school, a committed Air Cadet who became a pilot, and a member of the Canadian Forces SkyHawks parachute team.

Serving with the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry from Edmonton, Karigiannis, then 31, became briefly famous in 2007 for writing a letter from Afghanistan to Maclean’s magazine in enthusiastic but modest praise of the beauty of the young woman, Kinga Ilyes, seated at a lecture hall desk on the cover of their university ranking issue. A round of newspaper reports presented her as the Darling of Kandahar, and Karigiannis wrote back to clarify, as Blatchford put it, “his noble intentions.”

The next morning, he was killed in a roadside bomb explosion. Two other soldiers died in the same strike, Cpl. Stephen Bouzane, 26, and Pte. Joel Wiebe, 22. Karigiannis’s charming crush became the most poignant detail of a brutal tragedy.

Three people looking at a plaque.
A plaque honouring fallen Canadian soldier Sgt. Chris Karigiannis is viewed by his mother Niki, brother Peter, right, and Jean Berard of the Royal Canadian Legion before being placed on a rock in front of Laval Liberty High School, November 11, 2008.Photo by Peter McCabe/Postmedia

The following Remembrance Day, in Laval, the students planted a tree for him. “It could have stopped there,” Blatchford wrote in 2013. “Such well-meant tributes, born in the emotion of tragedy, often do. But in the years that followed, something absolutely remarkable happened.”

Karigiannis’s death “just made the world smaller,” Johnson said in an interview. So they thought about what to do next. He remembers them saying: “Why do we just plant trees and put up plaques and walk away and no one remembers? Why don’t we do more?”

They came up with an unusual idea. His students asked the 3PPCLI if they could adopt the regiment. Both sides of this unusual new family, the soldiers in Alberta and students in Quebec, took to it enthusiastically.

“Everything connected,” Johnson said. Soldiers started showing up to work with the soccer team, to join the summer camp trips to the Laurentians, to run the hockey days. A student leadership program developed out of this adoption, which continues to this day.

Corporal Dupéré, although he was with local Royal 22nd Regiment, known in English as the Vandoos, became an important figure in this program, helping to share his own instructional experiences with adversity.

He was luckier than Karigiannis. On a patrol in an Afghanistan marketplace in 2011, Dupéré was about two metres from a suicide bomber at the moment of detonation. He lost an eye and some function in his left side, but survived, indeed thrived, pursuing volunteer work after retiring from the military in 2015, which put him in touch with the students at Laval. After he died in an accidental fall in 2021 aged 40, they wrote about his optimism, took inspiration from his feats of endurance despite his serious injuries, and eventually chose him as the centrepiece of a memorial to soldiers that they fully intend will outlast even themselves.

“It’s never going to be finished until it’s finished,” Johnson said.

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