Patric Allard, Taken May 2006 at Hog's Back, Ottawa.
Monday was the 69th anniversary of the Liberation of the Netherlands, which was led by the Canadians in the Second World War.
After the war, the Netherlands wanted to say Thank You to Canada for its war service, and it gave the country, and Ottawa in particular, tulip bulbs. Ottawa adopted the tulip as its official flower.
In 1953, Ottawa started the Tulip Festival, and this year, it runs from May the 9th to the 19th, with fireworks, musical shows, Cirque de Liberation, and the International Pavilion.
The festival claims to be the world's largest tulip festival. There are over one million tulips planted all over the city, and there are over 500,000 visitors each year. It is quite a show!
This year, the festival will honour artist Silvia Pecota. She will be in attendance May 9th, 17th & 18th from 2 pm to 4 pm at Queen Juliana Park (by Dow’s Lake – a man-made lake in the center of the city) and you will be able to view some of the photos she took of the Canadian Armed Forces in Afghanistan (2001-2014).
She is presently working on an art book that incorporates her poetry. It covers the War of 1812 (Bicentennial), WWI (Centennial) and the Closure of the Afghan Mission (2014).
For more information, visit her website at www.silviapecota.com.
To read about Canada’s role in the liberation of the Netherland, go to http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/history/second-world-war/canada-netherlands
To read about the Tulip Festival, see http://tulipfestival.ca/site/home/en
1 comment:
My Dad and his brother were there, and my Uncle brought home a war bride from Holland.
When we were in Calgary looking after my brother, one of the nurses he had was a young woman from Holland. She said all the kids learn in school about how the Canadians liberated them and the people are STILL gratefull for that. She kissed my father and thanked him.
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