2019-05-23

A Strange Way to Dream

I had a strange experience during my sleep last night.

Let me set a bit of context: Firstly, for those few dreams that I remember when I awake, I am somewhat of a lucid dreamer. While dreaming, I am fully aware that I am dreaming, that the events I experience have no reality. Secondly, I sleep rather raggedly; periodically awakening to change my position in the bed, varying from on my right side, on my front, to on my left side (on my back is an alert position for me on which I do not sleep). Since, when I sleep on one side or another, I keep a pillow between my knees and another held to my chest, I need to be awake enough to rearrange those cushions as I change position.

Spotted Lake with the peak of Mount Kobau behind it, centre right.
"TV Mountain" is well out of the photo on the right.
With last night's dream, I found we were at Spotted Lake. Who, "we," were remained a bit dream vague but Adam, Angela's dog, was with us. I decided that we should hike the trail from Spotted Lake to the top of the spur off Mount Kobau that I grew up calling TV Mountain because of the television repeater at its peak. As can happen in a dream, the context can change. Instead of following the trail to the top of the spur, we were following a trail to the top of Mount Kobau. Adam and I were enjoying the hike with one other person, sometimes in the dream my brother John and at other times an unidentified companion. It seems our plan was to hike to the top then down above Testalinda Canyon to meet Tina with the car where Testalinda Creek breaks out of the canyon onto its alluvial fan. It must have been early summer as, at one point during our hike, we came across a family hiking down the trail with a small dog that had cherries dangling off its ears. We soon found a wild cherry tree on the right side of the trail with beautiful big ripe cherries, the size of Lapin cherries. Further up the trail, we found another wild cherry tree but its cherries were the size of normal wild cherries. These, of course, are completely out of context on Mount Kobau. We hiked on but the dream eventually petered out as we got to a place where we could view down the other side across the Similkameen Valley but before we reached the top of the mountain.

The really strange bit occurred while I was still dreaming. At some point between the cherries and seeing across the Similkameen, I awoke with an urge to change my sleeping position. I was fully aware of my presence in our bedroom and position on the bed, yet the dream continued to play even as, fully awake, I changed my sleeping position and rearranged my pillows. At the same time, I was aware of myself as both in my bed and on the trail up Mount Kobau.

2018-12-24

Christmas Letter, '18

Nadolig Llawen! Merry Christmas! Buon Natale!

Christmas 2018.

From our home to yours, dear Family and Friends,

Again it is our pleasure to share a little bit of our lives over the past year at this very special time of year.  We hope you enjoy a full and restful Christmas/New Year season.  2018 brought challenges and changes.

Tina continued to take casual shifts, nursing at VGH while she enjoyed her retirement but found those shifts increasingly wearing on her health. She took complete retirement in the spring and feels the release from ward nursing  For the first half of the year, she also kept up her cello lessons at the Delta Community Music School under the tutelage of Bo Peng, accepting gradually increasingly more challenging music to learn. With autumn, Tina changed from private lessons to joining the Camerata Strings adult ensemble in the VSO School of Music. She, now, enjoys the new cello music and playing as part of an ensemble.

With exercise and prescribed medication, Ted's health continues as stable although the atrial fibrillation that developed very late last year persisted well into this year, long enough that his heart doctors decided he needed cardioversion to correct it. This was a very simple procedure, the doctor simply made Ted’s ICD jolt his heart. Otherwise, he is bothered only by occasional colds.  While in atrial fibrillation, Ted did have to ease off on his swimming and cycling exercise routine, substituting long walks with Angela's dog, Adam.  In addition, a change in Angela’s working schedule meant that he continues to walk Adam twice a day, most days of the week.  These are long walks that can take an hour or more each and Ted routinely exceeds the recommended minimum 10,000 steps per day by a substantial margin.

Angela and her friends in the Dusty Babes Collective continue to work in their ceramic art studio in South Surrey near White Rock. She spends much of Tuesdays to Fridays with her own works at the studio.  Angela continues her part-time position as the lead ceramics studio technician for the South Surrey Recreation Centre, working Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and teaching ceramics classes at South Surrey on Tuesday evenings. From time to time she also teaches on Saturday mornings or Wednesday evenings. Angelo teaches mainly adult classes which vary from those for absolute beginners to classes in more advanced ceramics skills. Most recently, she taught glazing. This class involved presenting much more theory than any of the other classes she has been teaching. After the first session, Angela announced, "I have never talked so much in all my life!" Busy at South Surrey, Angela left her one day a week studio technician position at Vancouver’s West End Community Centre early in the new year.

Tina and Ted both remain in wonder at the beauty of Angela’s ceramic creations which range from handcrafted ceramic buttons through cups and bowls of various sizes and exquisitely delicate ceramic sculptures to large vases. Last May and June, the Dusty Babes received the honour of having a main gallery showing in a public art gallery, the Gibsons Public Art Gallery. The Dusty Babes also hosted an open studio showing and sale, just this month, presenting works by the entire collective. Angela remains an active member of the Potters Guild of BC, participating with their substantial changes at the Gallery of BC Ceramics.

Outside of her art, Angela continues her interest in sophisticated board games and computer gaming which she shares with her girlfriend, Christy, enjoying relaxing time to play and be together each Sunday afternoon and evening.

David completed his musical studies as a founding student in the new strings program within the Music Department of Kwantlen Polytechnic University at the Langley campus, earning a Bachelor of Music in Musical Arts degree, specialized on his viola. His studies gave him great success while he really enjoys the associated performance opportunities.  The strings program remained very small which meant that no large ensemble (required as part the music degree program) existed, and KPU continued to send their strings players to the Langley School District Honour Orchestra who rehearsed on campus in order to make up that large ensemble. David played Principal Viola. Kwantlen also required music students to participate in small ensembles and kept the chamber orchestra under instruction from the Borealis String Quartet as a small ensemble. We enjoyed end-of-term recitals and concert performances by David as a solo performer with piano accompaniment, by the Chamber Orchestra, and by the full orchestra.  Outside university, David continued with private study on his viola with Robert Hirschhorn Rozek and keeps those studies up.

Last spring, David rehearsed and performed with the West Coast Symphony Orchestra, a semi-professional organization that mixes professional and amateur musicians. After KPU graduation, David continued to watch for opportunities in other orchestras. He found the New Westminster Symphony Orchestra to be a better fit for him and joined in September, really enjoying rehearsing and performing under conductor, Jack (Jin) Zhang and a guest conductor. David also plays his viola with the Camerata Strings adult ensemble in the VSO School of Music. In both cases, David is playing as an amateur but he watches for professional opportunities to arise.

David continues to enjoy writing, especially fiction, with which he extends his imagination. He continues his major rewrite of The Stolen Treasure, a novel he had originally developed as a young teen.  His novel, The Sheltered Life of Betsy Parker, published three years ago as a digital copy, continues to draw ongoing interest and responses on the GoodReads literary sharing site. David keeps the second addition available both digitally and as hardcopy on Amazon. Apart from his music and his writing, David has found part-time employment with Meridian Farm Market at their store in Tsawwassen, working two days a week. He continues to keep a lookout for other non-music employment opportunities.

David’s ASD remains a significant factor in his life, limiting his social connection among his contemporaries and gave him another crisis mental health issue this autumn. He has the courage to share this publicly. His ASD specialist psychiatrist and our minister at Ladner United Church, together, give David wonderful support in response through that issue. Tina and Ted feel deeply thankful for such readily at-hand support. David's ASD psychiatrist does travel a lot in his work and asked David to find a fall-back professional for those occasions when David may need urgent support while he is away. For this, David has reconnected with the Able Developmental Clinic and their principal psychologist who assessed David as a child.

Other than a few quick trips to Vancouver Island, our only get-away this year was, again, a return to Cusheon Lake Resort on Salt Spring Island for the Canada Day weekend.  This brought us our familiar enjoyments of the lake, Beddis Beach, Ruckle Park, Ganges, and Salt Spring Island Gelato at Harlan’s as well as the, remarkable for a small community, Canada Day fireworks.

Beyond the immediate family, we continue to enjoy our extended family. With Ted’s brother Norman, wife Barbara, and son Evan living nearby, we share visits regularly. Evan and his business partner keep very busy establishing their construction contracting business, Form to Finish Construction. Evan’s brother, Gareth completed his post-doctoral work at Melbourne University (Australia) and returned to North America during the summer, taking an Assistant Professorship position at Western Oregon University with the responsibility to create a new environmental research laboratory. While settling in at Monmouth, Oregon, Gareth, his wife ZoĆ«, and baby daughter Rosy took a brief opportunity to visit home with Norman and Barbara and join us for one of our visits to the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary, We look forward to when they come again after Christmas. At Thanksgiving, Ted’s second great-nice*, Cassie Hopkins, her brother Luke, and his new bride Adele, graced us in sharing our festive dinner, letting us connect more closely with remote family. Early in November, Ted’s brother, John and daughter Leah visited from Calgary, enjoying Adam and Norman’s dog, Lola’s time in the North 40 Dog Off-Leash Park.

Several years ago, Ted had done genealogical DNA testing with 23andMe. Angela gave Tina a 23andMe kit for her birthday this year. As part of their service, they advise of others in their database with closely matching DNA.  Both of us continue to discover relatives previously not known to us. Ted found a distant cousin living in Sydney, Australia, who is related on the Butchart line of his mother’s side of the family. She is most enthusiastic about our family connection. Tina found Petraccione relatives, the son of one first cousin and the daughter of another first cousin plus several other not yet resolved possible connections. She looks forward to discovering connections on the Crompton side of her family.

Looking beyond ourselves, here in British Columbia, we participated in the referendum on electoral reform. Together, we found ourselves ill at ease with the options offered in support of so-called proportional representation. As a life-long voter who has prided himself as a vote-the-person voter and not a vote-the-party voter, Ted is particularly uncomfortable with the idea of placing MLAs into our legislature for whom nobody has directly had an opportunity to cast a personal vote. He could only see the partial option for a preferential ballot (STV) as somewhat reasonable. since he has long hoped B. C. would return to voting with a preferential ballot. Ted remains troubled by the direction Canada’s federal government continues to take: not enough of the promised “real change” and too much keeping the destructive policies of the defeated previous government. This applies most strikingly to the government’s approach to so-called free trade treaties (more accurately characterized as international corporate protection deals) containing the sovereignty-attacking ISDS provision that treats international business corporations not as subjects of nations and welcome guests within other nations but more as non-territorial kingdoms apart from and equal with nations. Ted is pleased that ISDS did get removed during the NAFTA renegotiation into the new USMCA treaty. It does remain in the CTPP agreement and as part of the ongoing negotiations towards the TiSA. We also share a certain unease with many around us at the actions of the current President of our neighbours to the south and his insistence on denying anthropogenic climate change, feeling some satisfaction that Congress is no longer Republican dominated. We continue to share many Canadian’s concern for the plight of the many refugees from those horrible civil wars in Syria and Yemen.

Perhaps the greatest change among us was with our family pets. Well past her eighteenth year, our calico cat, Catinka, remained very much queen of our house but, over the summer, showed every sign of remaining healthy but elderly, losing weight and moving more carefully, yet very much still her confident self. Then we lost her. She simply disappeared. A neighbourhood lady told how two of her cats had successively grown elderly and disappeared without a trace. It seems that it is an elderly cat thing to have a sense that the end has come and find a very very private place to die. We miss our Catinka dearly. Angela’s ducks continued to hold authority over our backyard. Jemima and Rebeccah again resumed their egg production with the new year, almost as heavily as last year, giving eggs all through the spring and into summer. Then came mid-August when we lost them to unknown wildlife.

Adam, Angela’s red-haired standard poodle, continues to endear himself to us all.  He keeps quite the collection of “friends” that he loves to greet and engage in play when out and about, his favourite game being “Chase Me,” running in great circles centred on the one of us who is out with him while his “friend” chases him along an inner circle.  To Adam’s dismay, many of his “friends” give up on this game. He runs too fast for them. Adam has much of Ladner well mapped in his head and his chosen routes when we walk are many and varied.

As winter came back to us, we are enjoying south Delta’s annual return of Trumpeter Swans and the vast flocks of Snow Geese. Very soon, trees along Highway 10 will burst into our annual crop of Bald Eagles. Early last summer, Ted had the privilege to show off to an Australian visitor several of Lander’s resident Bald Eagle nests with their near fledged youngsters. He also shared our own resident Steller’s Jays, the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary, and the great Tsawwassen Heronry with this visitor. At home, our bird feeder remains frequented by Chickadees, House Finches, and Juncos while Anna’s Hummingbirds use their feeder more frequently and Steller’s Jays enjoy our steady supply of peanuts.

Ted continues to seek players to experiment with his invented team sports of Two Ball and Delta.  Lacking sufficient contact of his own among sports-minded youth, he continues to approach schools as their Physical Education and intramural sports programs likely offer the best chance of drawing sufficiently large groups of players together.  This remains disappointing as no schools have taken up either game yet.  Ted also keeps up his web presence for the games, periodically posting to the site blog, and on Facebook.  These continue to catch some attention worldwide, but he still awaits word of anyone actually playing either game.  You remain invited to have a look, perhaps to draw the games to the attention of sport-minded people you may know.

And now we look forward to 2019.  Recent weeks, of course, have filled us with Christmas preparations.  We hope yours have gone well and we wish you a Merry and Blessed Christmas and all happiness in the New Year.

With our Christmas love,
Ted, Tina, David, and Angela.

P. S. That this letter arrives on Christmas Eve is entirely deliberate.


Blwyddyn Newydd Dda! Happy New Year! Felice Nuovo Anno!

2017-12-24

Christmas Letter '17

Nadolig Llawen! Merry Christmas! Buon Natale!

Christmas 2017.

From our home to yours, dear Family and Friends,

Again it is our pleasure to share a little bit of our lives over the past year at this very special time of year.  We hope you enjoy a full and restful Christmas/New Year season.  2017 has remained a typical year for us, happy with mostly ordinary challenges.

Tina continues to take casual shifts, nursing at VGH  while she enjoys her retirement.  She also keeps up her cello lessons at the Delta Community Music School under the tutelage of Bo Peng, accepting gradually increasingly more challenging music to learn.  When Bo introduced Tina to a cello that more suitably matched her stature, she readily accepted the opportunity to change instruments. Now, Tina also enjoys the new cello’s music.

With exercise and prescribed medication, Ted's health continues as stable except for a bit of a cardiac scare earlier this month from atrial fibrillation that doctors assured us posed no threat. Otherwise, he is bothered only by occasional colds.  He continues to alternate 3 days of swimming (2500 m. in roughly 50 min.) with 3 days of cycling (16.4 km. in roughly 50 min.), sometimes substituting a good stiff walk (a little over 4.3 km. in roughly 45 min.), although through the current month that schedule has been somewhat disrupted.  In addition, Ted often walks Adam once or twice a day, depending on Angela’s working and studio activities.  With stops for sniffing and other doggy business, these walks do not constitute measurable exercise but can take an hour or more each.

Angela and her friends in the Dusty Babes Collective continue to work in their studio in south Surrey near White Rock. She has spent much of Tuesdays to Fridays with her own works at the studio.  Angela continued her part-time position as Monday ceramics studio technician for the South Surrey Recreation Centre in addition to her Saturday ceramics studio technician work for Vancouver’s West End Community Centre but added periodic stints teaching ceramics classes at South Surrey on Tuesday evenings. Angela’s immediate supervisor at South Surrey moved on to other opportunities at the beginning of December and Angela promptly received the call to take his place as the lead studio technician. This is still part-time work, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays but, when she teaches on Tuesdays, her schedule becomes quite full. Busy Angela, the West End Community Centre has called her to take selected extra Tuesday and/or Thursday shifts this month. Tina and Ted both remain in wonder at the beauty of Angela’s ceramic creations which range from handcrafted ceramic buttons through cups and bowls of various sizes and exquisitely delicate ceramic sculptures to large vases. Last spring, the Dusty Babes received the honour of having two members, Angela and Amelia Butcher, accepted to have their works on permanent display at the Gallery of BC Ceramics. The Dusty Babe’s open studio, earlier this month, successfully presented and sold works by the entire collective. In addition, the Dusty Babes look forward to fulfilling their invitation to present a group show at this prestigious gallery of ceramic art, not yet scheduled in the new year, and at a scheduled showing of their works at a gallery in Gibson’s Landing, come spring.

Outside of her art, Angela continues her interest in sophisticated board games which she shares with her girlfriend, Christy, enjoying relaxing time to play each Sunday.

David continues his musical studies as a founding student in the new strings music program within the Music Department of Kwantlen Polytechnic University, commuting to the Langley campus for his final year.  His focus remains on his viola, giving him great success while he really enjoys his studies.  The strings program remains very small which means that no large ensemble (required as part the music degree program) exists, although the university attempted an approximation of a large group by forming a chamber orchestra with instructors from the Borealis String Quartet. This did not persist with the new term in September and KPU welcomed the Langley School District Honour Orchestra onto campus for rehearsals while taking the KPU string students into that large ensemble. David plays Principal Viola. Kwantlen also requires music students to participate in small ensembles and kept the chamber orchestra with Borealis as a small ensemble. We enjoyed the end-of-term recitals and concert performances by David as a solo performer with piano accompaniment and by his trio (David, a cello student, and a piano student from Kwantlen Music’s piano program) in March and by his solo performance with piano accompaniment and with the chamber orchestra at the end of term this month.  Outside university, David continues with private study on his viola with Robert Hirschhorn Rozak.

David continued private study on piano, at the Delta Community Music school, in Garth Preston’s studio, through the spring but did not resume with autumn, concentrating on his university studies.  David anticipated being free to take his viola to play and perform with the Stradivari Ensemble in the New Year but their rehearsal scheduling just did not work for him.  As anticipated, David did accept the Vancouver Welsh Mens’ Choir invitation to audition to join the choir and was accepted.  He attended a few rehearsals in the New Year, welcomed warmly, but found that learning choral music distracted him from his studies and regretfully decided he could not continue. He did want to keep up with some form of orchestral playing beyond what KPU offered. With a bit of investigating, David learned of the West Coast Symphony Orchestra, semi-professional organization that mixes professional and amateur musicians. He auditioned, was readily accepted in the viola section, and joined rehearsals late in the autumn. David looks forward to being part of his first concert with the WCSO in the New Year.

David continues to enjoy writing, especially fiction, with which he extends his imagination. He is currently in the midst of a major rewrite of The Stolen Treasure, a novel he had originally developed as a young teen.  His novel, The Sheltered Life of Betsy Parker, published two years ago as a digital copy continues to draw ongoing interest and responses on the GoodReads literary sharing site. David keeps the second addition available both digitally and as hardcopy on Amazon. From the events in the novel for which wrote piano tunes, David and his Music Technology instructor for developed a musical media project during the spring term. That instructor also introduced him to the Sarah McLachlan School of Music as a volunteer supporting young music students who share in David’s ASD, a very satisfying experience for David.

David’s ASD remains a significant factor in his life, limiting his social connection among his contemporaries and gave him a second crisis mental health issue early in the year. He had the courage to share this publicly and his ASD specialist psychiatrist and our minister at Ladner United Church, together, give David wonderful support in response through that issue. Tina and I feel deeply thankful for such readily at-hand support.

Other than a few quick trips to Vancouver Island, our only get-away this year was a return to Cusheon Lake Resort on Salt Spring Island for the Canada Day weekend.  This brought us our familiar enjoyments of the lake, Beddis Beach, Ruckle Park, Ganges, and Salt Spring Island Gelato at Harlan’s as well as their, remarkable for a small community, Canada Day fireworks.

This year brought two significant life events for us to mark. We helped Ted’s immediately younger brother John celebrate his seventieth birthday in Calgary in September. In the extended family, Ted has become a great uncle once more. His nephew, Gareth and wife ZoĆ« remain at the University of Melbourne where Gareth works on a post-doctoral fellowship studying the effects of artificial lighting on cricket and other insect populations. They now have their first born child making grandparents of Ted’s little brother Norman and his wife Barbara, just born as Ted writes this.

Also with the extended family, in March Ted went Calgary with Norman to support John as he proudly presented some of Dad’s memoirs and poetry to the Calgary Welsh Society at their annual St. David’s Day luncheon. John’s wife, Liz, daughter Leah and our Cousin Iris Macleod also attended. The membership received the presentation and accompanied by a PowerPoint slide show very well. Ted’s extended family also grew as he located a long-lost family member.  Several years ago, Ted had done genealogical DNA testing with 23andMe. As part of their service, they advise of others in their database with closely matching DNA.  One such person turned out to be Crystal Adamek, the daughter of Ted’s late half-brother, Bud (Edward Joseph Hopkins)’s only son, Ted’s nephew, long lost to the family ever since he was adopted as a young boy by his mother’s second husband. Born Victor Warren Hopkins, he is now Victor St. Laurent and lives in Swan Hills, Alberta, sharing Ted’s interest in amateur astronomy.  Victor and his wife Della with Crystal, her husband Wayne, and baby daughter give new branches to the Family Tree! Ted and John keep occasional contact with them both as we delight in welcoming them into our extended family and Ted and Victor sway comment on night sky events.

Looking beyond ourselves, Ted remains troubled by the direction Canada’s new federal government continues to take: not enough of the promised “real change” and too much keeping the destructive policies of the defeated previous government.  This applies most strikingly to the government’s approach to so-called free trade treaties (more accurately characterized as international corporate protection deals) containing the sovereignty-attacking ISDS provision that treats international business corporations not as subjects of nations and welcome guests within other nations but more as non-territorial kingdoms apart from and equal with nations. Ted’s concern impelled him to prepare a petition in response to NAFTA renegotiation, focussed on this element of the treaty. He copied the text to his blog. He is deeply disappointed with the lack of participation in this petition as Canadians seem either no longer to have care about retaining our national sovereignty or do not understand the threat.  We also share a certain unease with many around us at the actions of the new President of our neighbours to the south and his Republican-dominated Congress.

We continue to share many Canadian’s concern for the plight of the many refugees from those horrible civil wars in Syria and Yemen. May a way to peace be found quickly.  Our congregation at Ladner United Church still supports one Syrian refugee family after two others attained sufficient independence to make their own decisions and relocate closer to relatives in Ontario.

Catinka, in her eighteenth year, remains very much queen of our house, while Angela’s ducks continue to hold authority over our backyard. Jemima and Rebeccah again resumed their egg production with the new year, just as heavily as last year, then slowed and stopped completely when they moulted with the end of summer.  They have not yet returned to laying again.  Adam, Angela’s red-haired standard poodle, continues to endear himself to us all.  He keeps quite the collection of “friends” that he loves to greet and engage in play when out and about, his favourite game being “Chase Me,” running in great circles centred on the one of us who is out with him while his “friend” chases him along an inner circle.  To Adam’s dismay, many of his “friends” still give up on this game. He runs too fast for them.

As winter came back to us, we have enjoyed south Delta’s annual return of Trumpeter Swans and the vast flocks of Snow Geese. Very soon, trees along Highway 10 will burst into our annual crop of Bald Eagles. At home, our bird feeder remains frequented by Chickadees, House Finches, and Juncos while Anna’s Hummingbirds use their feeder more frequently and Steller’s Jays enjoy our steady supply of peanuts.

Ted continues to seek players to experiment with his invented team sports of Two Ball and Delta.  Lacking sufficient contact of his own among sports-minded youth, he continues to approach schools as their Physical Education and intramural sport programs likely offer the best chance of drawing sufficiently large groups of players together.  This remains disappointing as no schools have taken up either game yet.  Ted also keeps up his web presence for the games, periodically posting to the site blog, and on Facebook.  These continue to catch some attention worldwide, but he still awaits word of anyone actually playing either game.  You are most welcome to have a look and draw the games to the attention of sport-minded people you may know.

And now we look forward to 2018.  Recent weeks, of course, have filled us with Christmas preparations.  We hope yours have gone well and we wish you a Merry and Blessed Christmas and all happiness in the New Year.

With our love,
Ted, Tina, David, and Angela.

P. S. That this letter arrives on Christmas Eve is entirely deliberate.


Blwyddyn Newydd Dda! Happy New Year! Felice Nuovo Anno!

2017-07-11

On the Omar Khadr Debacle

Okay, let me get this straight:
• A nine-year-old juvenile Canadian-born citizen, far below any age of legal consent and below the age of criminal responsibility, gets taken away from Canadian schooling and Canadian socialization by his own father and placed within a criminal terrorist organization in a foreign country, a conflict zone where all this juvenile Canadian-born citizen can know and experience is the indoctrination and socialization within that criminal terrorist organization, compelling him to become a child soldier, while Canadian authorities give no attention whatsoever to this blatant child abuse, child endangerment, and gross contributing to the delinquency of a juvenile;
• in time, following a combat firefight between American soldiers and a unit of this criminal terrorist organization in which an American soldier, in training to become a military medic but, at the time, serving in a combat role, was fatally wounded by a grenade thrown, according to field reports written immediately following the incident, by a middle-aged terrorist who was immediately shot and killed during the conflict, this still juvenile Canadian-born citizen, not yet sixteen years of age, was found, severely injured but alive and buried under rubble as the sole survivor from the terrorist unit, and treated for his injuries then taken prisoner;
• As a prisoner, this still juvenile Canadian-born citizen got placed among adult detainees in a notorious prison within the country of conflict, then transferred with adult detainees to another notorious prison at an American military base in another country, without formal designation either as a prisoner of war or as a convicted juvenile criminal, where he was held through his remaining teenage years and well into his adulthood all the while without appropriate contact with Canadian authorities;
• While this Canadian-born citizen remained in these prisons, other prisoners who were citizens of other nations got called home by their own governments and returned in accordance with the laws and treaty obligations their own home governments, yet the government of Canada refused to call for the return of this Canadian-born citizen;
• Also, while held in these prisons and in contravention of international law and the treaty prohibiting torture, this Canadian-born citizen was subjected to substantial torture over many years, yet Canada's government under three different Prime Ministers extended no objection to this ongoing torture as would be appropriate in order to meet the obligations to which Canada committed as a signatory to the International treaty prohibiting the torture;
• Over a great many years, and through the administrations of three different Prime Ministers, this Canadian-born citizen’s incarceration without appropriate designation, persisted with neither contact nor support from Canadian authorities as required under Canadian law and our Charter of Rights and Freedoms, instead Canadian authorities neglected and may have abetted his intolerable incarceration and torture;
• Eventually and after extraction under torture of a confession of murder, this ill-educated and highly indoctrinated from youth Canadian-born citizen, as the sole survivor of the terrorist unit involved in the combat firefight, received the offer of a trial by military tribunal on a charge of murder of the American soldier killed by the grenade – the offer extended with the condition that he plead guilty as charged or the offer of a trial would be withdrawn and he would remain unclassified in incarceration without charge indefinitely;
• Upon conviction for this trumped-up murder charge the way was finally cleared for this Canadian-born citizen to return to Canada where he served some time within the Canadian prison system;
• In due course, during the term of the government of our immediately previous Prime Minister, Canadian law courts became aware of the situation and brought down a ruling that the rights of this Canadian-born citizen had been flagrantly violated and that the government of the day and the governments under the two immediately previous Prime Ministers had broken Canadian law, paving the way for a suit for damages against the Government of Canada;
And many other Canadians are outraged that the current Government of Canada negotiated an apology to this Canadian-born citizen and an out-of-court settlement at roughly half the anticipated penalty that our courts may have imposed while also saving on the substantial legal costs of attempting to defend this case.