Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, I'm honoured to be here today to discuss the wonderful work of the Dominion Institute.
I thought I'd share some of the things I've learned, some of which surprised me, about teaching military history to our students. I've spent about 200 hours in secondary schools with students in their last or second last year of high school. I'd like to share with you some of the things I've learned.
One of the first things I'd like to mention is that specially gifted teachers understand that military history and history in general are connected directly to our ideas of freedom and democracy. Teachers tell me again and again that our students think freedom is like oxygen: it's there, you breathe it, and it's free. They have almost no understanding of how we came to be free, of how we have preserved our freedom, and of the price we have paid.
When I tell the students that at the moment there are over 116,000 young Canadians buried in foreign lands due to our various struggles to retain our freedom, they begin to see the connections between our history and our military history and the fact that they are free. It comes as a great surprise to them. It's a matter of wonderment and great interest to them, and sometimes to young teachers, that our freedom is not free, that it has to be protected and preserved, as we know.
I also discovered when I went into the classrooms of Toronto, which has a very multicultural atmosphere with people from all over the world in our classrooms, that instead of having little interest in Canada's military history, the multicultural students have an enormous interest in it. At the present time, I'm being asked to go to Chinese schools in the big Chinese churches in the communities of Toronto, because Chinese leaders are interested in teaching their children that in 1941 Canadian troops were their allies in defending their homeland in Hong Kong. It is of great interest and comes as a great surprise to these Chinese leaders that their children know absolutely nothing about this and that they are now in a country that came to their aid in 1941, as you know, with disastrous results when the entire force was wiped out.
If anything, the multicultural students seem to have more interest in our history. Multicultural students want to know what it was all about. They weren't here, and often their parents weren't here, but they're really interested in how we have preserved our freedom, why we're different, and how it came about. This little country, in comparison to the great powers that were at war in World Wars I and II.... How did we behave? What did we do? What part did we play? Had it anything to do with our freedom? They love this country and they're fascinated. When it's question period time in the classroom, the first to put up a hand is somebody from India, Pakistan, Iran, Hong Kong, or wherever.
I thought you'd be interested in the fact that military history in the classroom unites our students even if they have come from very different lands. I thought I'd also share with you the fact that our teachers need help. It's a difficult job to teach about World War I, and especially World War II, out of a book. Young teachers are often not very confident about it, and the Dominion Institute provides valuable support to them. I see more and more of them turning to us for this help. The information and the technology that the Dominion Institute plans to use to help teachers is terrific. I have found that teaching the teachers is extremely important. The difference between the really gifted teachers and those who are not so gifted is amazing, and the difference in the classroom is significant.
I will outline for you how the Dominion Institute, through me, helps our teachers. When a school or a history teacher—usually the head of the history department of a high school—contacts the Dominion Institute, they ask for a veteran speaker, and the institute asks what sort of speaker they would like. If they would like to hear about the Battle of Hong Kong or the Battle of Vimy Ridge, we have special speakers for them. The Dominion Institute phones and asks me to speak at the school. When the agreement has been made that I will speak, I am given the telephone number of the teacher, whom I then call and arrange to see, usually at lunch, a week or two before the meeting is to be held. I ask her or him where they are in the curriculum, what it is they want to hear about, whether they want questions, and so on. We usually have lunch in the high school cafeteria, and there I often find out how well prepared the teacher is.
At this point, the teacher generally has some interesting questions for me, and we begin to discuss how we're going to present the meeting in about two weeks. The teacher will often take my book or some other reference and tell the class that this old man is coming to talk to them, and that they ought to get boned up on this stuff. They decide on the questions they want to ask me. This way, the teacher drums up a lot of interest and ideas, and it's much more fun than trying to read a history out of the written text. After all, they're going to go and meet this old man and they don't want to look like a bunch of dummies, so they have to read something before they can decide what to ask me. The next week they have a meeting, a regular class meeting, where they decide on their questions and pick the people who will ask them. Then the great day comes. The old man shows up with his 20 slides, and they spend an hour together discussing World War II.
This is all made possible because of the Dominion Institute. I couldn't imagine how we could do anything like this without their support.
I think I've said enough now. Those are some of my principal ideas. Students want to learn and become fascinated, and their teachers want to let them know that our freedom is not just like the oxygen you breathe. It has come at a big price, and we have to know our history to keep from making the mistakes of the past.
Thank you.