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Soldiers exist for you

Ammo

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Interesting read
http://www.torontosun.com/news/columnists/peter_worthington/2010/02/04/12742161-qmi.html
Troops blend self-sacrifice with duty and their devotion to Canada is unwavering

By PETER WORTHINGTON, QMI Agency

We hear a lot these days about our soldiers in Afghanistan — especially those who come home in coffins.

Mike Czuboka, Winnipeg publisher of a monthly newsletter, The Rice Paddy — he and I were in different battalions of the Princess Pats in the Korean War — sent the following assessment. Its origin is unknown:

The Canadian soldier is profane and irreverent, living as he does in a world of capriciousness, frustration and disillusionment.

He is perhaps the best-educated of his kind in history, but rarely accords respect on the basis of mere degrees or titles.

He speaks his own dialect, often incomprehensible to the layman. He can be cold, cruel, even brutal and is frequently insensitive. Killing is his profession and he strives to become even more skilled at it.

His model is the grey, muddy, hard-eyed comrade who took the untakeable at Vimy Ridge, endured the unendurable in the Scheldt and held the unholdable at Kapyong.

He is a superlative practical diplomat; his efforts have brought peace to many around the world. He is capable of astonishing acts of kindness, warmth and generosity. He will give you his last sip of water on a parched day and his last food to a hungry child; he will give his life for the society he loves.

Danger and horror are his familiars and his sense of humour is, accordingly, sardonic. What the unknowing take as callousness is his defence against the unimaginable; he whistles through a career filled with graveyards.

His ethos is one of self-sacrifice and duty. He is sinfully proud of himself, of his unit, of his country. He is unique in that his commitment is total. No other trade or profession demands such of its members, and none could successfully try.

He loves his family dearly, sees them all too rarely and often as not loses them to the demands of his profession. Loneliness is the price he accepts for the privilege of serving.

He regards discomfort as routine; the search for personal gain is beneath him; he has neither understanding of, nor patience with, those motivated by self-interest, politics or money.

His loyalty can be absolute, but must be earned. Paradoxically, payment for his loyalty, is also loyalty.

He devours life in big bites, knowing that each bite might be his last; his manners suffer thereby. He would rather die regretting the things he did than the ones he dared not try.

He earns a good wage by most standards and, given the demands on him, is woefully underpaid. He can be arrogant, thoughtless and conceited, but will spend himself, sacrifice everything for total strangers in places he cannot pronounce.

He considers political correctness a podium for self-righteous fools, but will die fighting for the rights of anyone he respects or pities

He is a philosopher and a drudge, an assassin and a philanthropist, a servant and a leader, a disputer and a mediator, a Nobel Laureate peacekeeper and the Queen’s hitman, a brawler and a healer, best friend and worst enemy.

He is a rock, a goat, a fool, a sage, a drunk, a provider, a cynic. You, pale stranger, sleep well at night only because he exists for you — the citizen who has never met him, has perhaps never thought of him and may even despise him.

He is both your child and your guardian. His devotion to you is unwavering. He is The Canadian Soldier.

 
Wow, extremely well written. I must save for future reference  for when someone says " I don't understand why anyone would want to live like that ",  I will hit them with the article. :salute:
 
An exceptional article! I read it in the Sun yesterday and felt that it was one of the greatest pieces in the paper.
 
That poem has been posted on this forum (in 2004 - see reply #10), just not in connection with an article by Peter Worthington.  It's still a good poem.
 
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