The Cleminshaw Family

Port Bruce Ontario

 

PB_Pier

  

Canadian Peacekeeping Service Medal

 

Foreword (2001): 
Almost 125,000 Canadians have served in peacekeeping missions over the past 53 years, a record unsurpassed by any nation. This tradition "in the service of peace" continues today. I was presented with the CPSM  on 04 October 2001. ........ Captain G.W. Cleminshaw (Ret'd)

CF BACKGROUNDER DOCUMENTATION
In 1988, the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to United Nations Peacekeepers in recognition of their collective efforts in the cause of peace for more than fifty years. This inspired the creation of the Canadian Peacekeeping Service Medal (CPSM), the purpose of which is to recognize all Canadians, including serving and former members of the Canadian Forces, members of the  RCMP and other police services, and Canadian civilians who contributed to peace on specific missions. The medal has taken some time to reach the presentation stage, but as with the creation of any major honour or award, the approval of this award involved consultation with a large number of interested individuals and groups.

THE MEDAL

The medal's obverse features the three Canadian Peacekeeper figures that top the Peacekeeping Monument in Ottawa. One is an unarmed United Nations Military Observer, holding a pair of binoculars. A second soldier, a woman, shoulders a radio, while the third stands guard with a rifle. Above them flies a dove, the international symbol of peace. This side of the medal also bears the inscriptions PEACEKEEPING and SERVICE DE LA PAIX, together with two maple leafs. The medal's reverse shows the cypher of Her Majesty the Queen on a maple leaf surrounded by two sprigs of laurel and the word CANADA.

 

THE RIBBON

The medal's ribbon consists of four colours: green, red, white and United Nations blue. The green represents volunteerism; the red and white are the colours of Canada's flag; while the white and blue represent the colour of the United Nations' flag, under whose auspices the majority of peacekeeping missions have taken place since 1947. The red and white carry additional meaning. White is associated with purity, and peacekeeping is one of mankind's highest ideals. Red is symbolic of the blood shed by the more than 125 Canadian peacekeepers who have fallen in service to their country while on peacekeeping and observer missions.

 

PeaceKeeper's Day Ceremonies in Calgary Alberta

Peacekeepers Park (click for big picture)
Photo By Don Norrie
On the 13th August 2006 Canada Lands Company and The Canadian Association of Veterans in United Nations Peacekeeping jointly conducted Peacekeeper Day Ceremonies in Garrison Green in the City of Calgary Park. 

Also see Peacekeeper's Park Middlesex County