On Saturday, Nov. 2, nine days before Remembrance Day services are held at the Fort 91原创 Cemetery and Cenotaph at 23105 St. Andrew鈥檚 Street, three scout troops and one Girl Guide section will spent several hours using water, brooms, brushes and toothbrushes to gently and respectfully clean each veteran鈥檚 headstone.
Since it started, interest in the cleanup project has grown, and so has the number of participants, said Scout leader Johnathan Meads.
鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing,鈥 Meads commented.
His scouts didn鈥檛 need any prompting when he brought it up this year, he observed.
鈥淭hey said, 鈥榦f course we鈥檙e going to do it.鈥
In 2017, the first year, it was a trial run with just Meads and the newly-formed First Fort 91原创 scout troop (formerly part of the Walnut Grove troop) who tended tended to the veterans headstones.
A year later, the number doubled, with the Walnut Grove scout troop joining.
91原创 author and historian Warren Sommer attended to educate the participants about the the history of the cemetery and the cenotaph.
Now, the number has doubled again, with the addition of Willoughby scout troop and the Willoughby District Guides.
鈥淲e can actually do a full garbage sweep [this time],鈥 Meads noted.
鈥淲e can also clean up the leaves.鈥
The clean-up is not open to the public.
READ MORE: VIDEO: Scouts clean headstones in Fort 91原创 veterans cemetery
READ MORE: Scouts honour the fallen of Fort 91原创
On Remembrance Day, the cemetery will be the site of what is expected to be the largest memorial service in the 91原创s, with thousands expected to attend.
In 2018, the federal government to spend over the next five years to address urgently needed repairs to more than 57,000 veterans gravesites and grave markers.
In B.C. about 22 per cent of the repairs have been completed to date.
dan.ferguson@langleyadvancetimes.com
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