The other question raised in the last meeting that I said I would follow up on and get further information about was the vignette that has been produced for Veterans' Week and for the Veterans' Week advertising and promotional campaign this year. It was questioned whether that would be available on DVD as well. Yes, it will be available on DVD. We have a distribution plan for it across the country, making it available to community groups and a variety of other groups across the country. Should members of Parliament be interested in obtaining a copy, we can provide copies of that DVD of the vignette to MPs as well.
With that as the follow-up to some of the items from last time, I thought I would expand a little bit on what parliamentarians could do to assist in promoting Veterans' Week and Remembrance Day activities themselves. There are a number of thing provided by the department and by the minister to parliamentarians. There is a householder and Web article that's provided to members of Parliament that can, of course, be used as members feel appropriate.
There is also this year a householder article and a Web article for the Italian campaign. This year we're marking the 65th anniversary of the Italian campaign, which took place from July 1943 until February 1945. This year during Veterans' Week, it is receiving emphasis in the activities that we're involved with across the country, and shortly after Veterans' Week there will be, as I think I mentioned last time, an overseas event to commemorate the sacrifices of Canadians in the Italian campaign.
There is also the sample package of Veterans' Week learning materials that is provided to members of Parliament, and any promotion of those materials that you can do within your constituencies to ensure that teachers and community groups are aware of the learning materials would be of great assistance. Sometimes those things, though they get to the schools, don't necessarily get to all of those people within the schools and within the community who could use them to assist in informing and engaging youth in remembrance activities. Any promotion of that would be of great assistance.
In addition, parliamentarians tend to know who the leaders are in their community activities and can encourage them to take on leadership roles in remembrance, to organize people in the community, whether it's youth groups or others, and encourage them to develop activities that would involve people, particularly reaching out to younger veterans and to young people in the school system, and in community groups such as Big Brothers, Big Sisters, and Scouts. We work with all of these organizations, but we can always use assistance in encouraging them to really take an active part in remembrance.
We have an online calendar of events that is active all year round on remembrance activities and other activities that Veterans Affairs becomes aware of. It's available not only for the department to put activities on there, but for the general public as well to upload their events and their ceremonies throughout the year. It's most active at this time of the year, and last year, in 2008, there were 320 Veterans' Week events posted on the online calendar of events.
That is something that more and more community groups are now using to help promote their events, to make people aware of them in their own communities. In fact, last year it was up 45% to 320 Veterans' Week events, and it's growing as well this year. As of last week, there were already 55 Veterans' Week events and they're literally being posted every single day, so any assistance in promoting that would be appreciated.
A new feature will be added to that next week, on October 14. It's a geomapping feature. People can put in their postal code and it will give all the events in their local community, based on the events closest to that postal code. So that would make it easier, again, to search. As you can imagine, this database has many events in it, and this will make it easier to narrow it down to a particular area.
One of the things I think I mentioned last time is that modern-day veterans, the younger veterans, often don't see themselves as veterans. In addition, many in the general public do not consider modern-day veterans to be veterans. This is probably one of the most important areas where parliamentarians, as leaders in the community, could assist—encouraging these younger veterans to see themselves as part of the veteran community and also encouraging the general public and, in particular, community groups organizing commemorative activities to include them and have them participate not as members of the audience, really, but rather as part of the group to whom tribute is being paid. This is one of the most important areas where everyone's full energies really need to be applied. If we in Veterans Affairs and if parliamentarians, in all of their work with communities and in speaking in communities, continue to emphasize this, it will take us a long way further down the road to having a better understanding of the contributions and sacrifices of the post-war Canadian Forces as well.
As an extension of this, I would encourage all parliamentarians, in any speeches or opportunities you have, to talk to people in your communities. If you include remembrance in your remarks, it would help encourage people to take an active role, not simply a passive role. Remembrance is not only for November 11; it's all year round. If it could be included in all of your opportunities, or as many as possible, that would be of great assistance as well.
Veterans Affairs will be involved in activities from coast to coast. Our staff in regional offices work with community groups everywhere in the country, from Vancouver Island to Newfoundland and across the north. The Remembrance Day ceremonies themselves are organized by the Royal Canadian Legion in almost all communities. That includes the national ceremony here in Ottawa at the National War Memorial. It is organized by the Royal Canadian Legion on behalf of the Government of Canada, and it has been that way since the 1930s.
In some communities, Legion branches have closed or are not active or strong enough to lead the Remembrance Day ceremonies. And in those cases, it's usually the municipality or some other community group that has taken on the lead and has organized the ceremonies. But in the vast majority of communities across the country, the actual November 11 ceremony is organized by the Royal Canadian Legion.
In terms of other Veterans’ Week activities, there are typically about 200 other remembrance activities, not the actual November 11 ceremony. Community groups approach Veterans Affairs for support through the community engagement partnership fund, and extensive support is provided across the country through that fund. But in addition to that, many groups do not require financial assistance to organize remembrance activities. What they often are looking for is advice, materials, and logistical support. And that is provided, as well, across the country.
The other thing I would suggest is that parliamentarians could also encourage people to go to the Veterans Affairs website and contact Veterans Affairs offices across the country for any assistance that they require for initiating and managing and leading remembrance activities.
Those are the suggestions I have, sir.