A Canadian veteran commits to peacemaking.
Fred Ritchie was a tank commander in Italy during World War II. Tall at 6’3”, he answered the call of the Canadian Armed Forces, believing he was responding patriotically to a cause that would wipe out evil.
“There was pressure on us to enlist,” he said in a talk in Saskatchewan a few years ago.
“We were made to feel guilty if we did not join up.” After the war, Fred became
active in the Canadian Legion to spread the slogan, “Never again.”
“That has all changed,” he says. “No more does anyone say, ‘Never again.’ We old vets are now used as propaganda to advance a new kind of Canadian patriotism that promotes the military.”
Fred belongs to a group called VANA (Veterans Against Nuclear Arms). When Fred attends a Remembrance Day ceremony, he wears a white beret to indicate his allegiance to the path of peace. “For this,” he says, “I have been criticized.”
Charlie Clark, who grew up in the United Church tradition, listened carefully to the stories of his beloved Grandpa Ritchie on his fruit orchard in Naramata, British Columbia. The stories came from a gentle man who had seen war up close and who believed there was a better way to solving problems.
After taking some courses at the Justice Institute of British Columbia, Charlie searched for more places to pursue peace alternatives. He enrolled at Menno Simons College in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and studied conflict resolution. While there, he came across Mediation Services of Winnipeg. He took a position there as a Mennonite Central Committee volunteer and spent two years learning about and teaching conflict resolution strategies. It was there that he crossed paths with another MCC volunteer, Sarah Buhler, who was the coordinator of the Inner City Program in downtown Winnipeg.
Sarah had grown up in Thailand and was a recent graduate of Canadian Mennonite Bible College, now Canadian Mennonite University. They met in a downtown church.
Her concern was for a homeless person who needed a pair of large shoes. Judging Charlie’s feet to be about the same as her homeless friend, she asked Charlie what size shoes he wore. This strange introduction was a bit more than Charlie could take. They met for coffee, and the rest is history.
Today Charlie Clark is a City Councilor in Saskatoon. In November 2010, Charlie chose to wear the MCC peace button, “To remember is to work for peace,” at a public council meeting. His two sons, Simon, 6, and Benjamin, 3, are surrounded by friends who play with toy guns.
“Guns are bad,” says Simon, who is a first grader. Ben is still finding his way, explaining a crude Lego pistol that he made: “This isn’t a gun,” he says, “it’s a laser that shoots only good things.”
If Charlie came to his peace position with a fine role model, Sarah was influenced by the well-known story of her great, great aunt “Taunte Liese” (Elizabeth Unger Buhler), who stood up to the terror of the dreaded Russian bandit Makhnov. In 1919, in the midst of a raid on her family in the village of Grigorjewka, with the women huddled in one corner of the Grote Schtov (large living room), 20-year-old Liese glanced unwittingly at the Kommandant. For a second he noticed the glance. Then fearlessly she took her guitar and sang folksongs and hymns. The Kommandant was so moved that he ordered his posse out of the village.
Fred Ritchie also met his enemy. In a lull from the fighting, he dismounted from his tank and sought refuge in a depression. Unbeknown to him, a German Nazi had chosen the same refuge. As Fred rounded an obstruction, he came face to face with his enemy.
“For a frozen second,” he told Charlie, “our eyes met. Each of us knew that the other had a sidearm. And then as quickly as we had met, we walked past each other. I think of that young teenager from time to time and wonder what would have happened if we had done what we were trained to do. One of us would be dead.”
It is fitting that those who died are remembered. Soldiers and those they killed should all be remembered. And their families. And the names of conscientious objectors should also be remembered.
As 94-year-old veteran Fred Ritchie says, “Never again.”
Fred Ritchie lives in retirement in Penticton, British Columbia. Sarah is a professor of law at the University of Saskatchewan. Sarah and Charlie have a third child, a 10-month-old daughter, Rachel. They are active in Osler Mennonite Church.
Jake Buhler is a member of Osler Mennonite Church.


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