News Sections
Corporal remembered for his courage, sense of duty
CTV News Video
Watch: See all Videos in the Player
CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Thu. Mar. 2 2006 10:39 PM ET
Cpl. Paul Davis, who was killed in an accident early Thursday near Kandahar, was offered a promotion that would have kept him at home and out of harm's way in Afghanistan.
But the grieving father of the 28-year-old soldier said his son showed courage in choosing the more dangerous assignment.
"He had the sense of duty of comradeship with the people he'd been training with, and felt he wanted to go with them," Jim Davis told CTV Atlantic in an interview from his home in Bridgewater, N.S. on Thursday.
Cpl. Davis, a married father of two, was on a routine patrol when the LAV-III (light-armoured vehicle) ran off the road and flipped over. Six other soldiers and a local Afghan interpreter were injured in the accident. Two of the soldiers remain in critical condition.
"My prayers are with the other parents of those boys who are struggling with their lives right now," said Jim Davis.
"I would also like you to know that I am an extremely proud dad. I'm very proud of my son Paul. I believed in what he was doing 100 per cent and to his friends in Afghanistan, if they're listening to me, I want them to know I'm 100 per cent behind all of them."
He added that he does not believe his son felt unsafe in the vehicles, despite criticisms that they are prone to tipping over.
"There's a lot of talk about Canadian military not having the latest equipment, but when I talked to Paul he said no, that's not necessarily true. They were confident in the equipment they had."
Davis said his son was a strong believer in what troops are accomplishing in Afghanistan, and said he worries that a mounting death toll will shake Canada's resolve to continue its mission there.
"I fear a huge debate on why we're in Afghanistan would endanger the lives of our soldiers because it entices or encourages the insurgents to keep up the battle," he said.
Meanwhile, friends and loved ones filed into the Davis home on Thursday to offer their support to the family. The last time Davis spent time with them was over the Christmas break, before he was sent off to the mission in Afghanistan on Jan. 23.
The corporal's stepmother, Sharon Davis, said she is devastated -- but said she recognizes that loss is a reality of war.
"And we need to support the effort because if it isn't stopped it will just get worse -- and our shores are not safe," she said.
It's a message Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been trying to hammer home to Canadians. At a news conference on Wednesday, he pledged unwavering support to the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan and issued a stern rebuke to Liberal MPs who have questioned Canada's role in the war-torn nation. Harper followed that on Thursday by joining 1,500 troops at an Ottawa Senators hockey game for Canadian Forces appreciation night -- where the sacrifice of Cpl. Davis was honoured.
Before the game, Canada's chief of defence staff, Gen. Rick Hillier, accepted a Senators jersey in appreciation and saluted his troops.
"They do everything we ask of them as a country. They do without regard to their lives and we saw the impact of that and what that could mean today when we lost Corporal Paul Davis in an accident in Afghanistan," said Hillier.
Back in Bridgewater, Jim Davis smiled and choked back tears as he reminisced about his son, who loved to play hockey as a child and was nicknamed "Smiley" by his teammates.
"He used to get a lot of penalties," he joked.
The last image he remembers of Paul was seeing him and his fellow soldiers off at the military strip of the Winnipeg airport.
"They were all looking forward to it, nervous of course. The image I have in my mind right now is the last glance I got from Paul when I said goodbye to him, just as he was about to board the plane. He was smiling."
With a report by CTV's David Akin and CTV Atlantic's Marc Patrone
User Tools
Related Stories
Canada in Afghanistan
Canadian in Charge
Canadian Brig.-Gen. David Fraser has a plan for Afghanistan - peace and stability.
Timeline of Canadian Involvement
Afghanistan: A timeline of Canadian involvement following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the U.S.
Most Popular
Most Viewed News Stories
Most Talked about Stories
No easy answer to this mess! The goverments of many nations have been over borrowing for years. People have not been much better. The old rule of you cannot spent more then you make applies to both. This whole thing is going to be a long, painful and bumpy ride. Unfortunately, no one will learn their lesson when this is over and we will be in the same perdicament 50 years from now. Most of the lessons from the Great Depression were not learned.
Email
