I would always say that the largest gap in anything is the awareness of Canadians of our military history. If Canadians were aware of our military history, they would be aware of the sacrifices that were made on their behalf. In Ontario, Canadian history takes up half a semester, or whatever, in grade 11. That's really not a lot of Canadian history. The knowledge of Canadians of military history and of the sacrifices made on their behalf is a big gap, I'd say. Since 2000 I think people are becoming more aware of what's going on.
Commemorations should centre on major activities, and this is what we've said here. We don't think it's necessary to go overseas every five years to commemorate a celebration. There are all sorts of celebrations that need to be done. We have to celebrate, basically, every theatre we were in--World War I and World War II, including the Italian campaign, which gets left off the battle map every once in a while. There are also the actions of the people who went through Africa. So we don't celebrate all of that all the time. We need to pick very significant commemorative dates--hundredth anniversaries are coming due now--and work on those projects.