Debate over national flag in 1965 a lesson for today
Toronto Star|February 15, 2024
Optimism is in short supply these days. You can find it in the dictionary, but looking for it elsewhere is like looking for a ham sandwich at a bar mitzvah. You're going to be disappointed. Except I think I can supply some optimism today.
MARK BULGUTCH
Debate over national flag in 1965 a lesson for today

On this day in 1965, our Maple Leaf flag flew for the first time.

Right at noon, as a military band played "O Canada," the flag was raised at the base of the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill. (British Movietone News reported that the event happened at, "the Parliament buildings in Montreal," but that's another story.)

There it was an Il-pointed red maple leaf, centred on a white square and bordered by two vertical bands of red.

The Canadian government says the flag reflects our values of freedom, peace, respect, justice and tolerance, as well as the grandeur of our history. That's a lot of heavy lifting for a piece of cloth. But who would argue?

Still, our flag was not born in a frenzy of national goodwill. Although I wasn't yet a teenager in 1965, I recall how Canada was bitterly divided by the fight to adopt the new flag.

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