Since we've spent a lot of time arguing about bringing back retired regiments, how about bringing back a nationwide officer training program?
More:
http://www.thewhig.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1569320
Citizens take old school approach
Posted By IAN ELLIOT
While the Canadian Forces has a presence in Afghanistan, the Congo and a host of world hot spots, there is one significant place they do not maintain a uniformed presence: on the grounds of Canadian universities.
It has been a generation since the Canadian Forces cancelled a long-running program in which students got a taste of military life while in school.
The Canadian Officer Training Corps was most notable during the two world wars, but was long a tradition of student life at Queen's University before it was cancelled in 1968. A group of citizens who call their cause the Seven Year Project believes it is time to bring back such a program.
A new documentary to be screened this week in Toronto, featuring those who went through the program, makes the case for the value of a student cadet corps.
Called No Country For Young Men and produced by documentarian Rob Roy, it looks at the Canadian experience of the training corps, which gave students a taste of military life with voluntary military training sessions in uniform during their time in school.
Supporters say it taught the students discipline and leadership that benefited them in post-university life, even if they did not subsequently follow a career in the regular forces or reserves.
A number of high-profile Canadians who went through the program praise their time in the corps. They say the larger importance of such a program is reconnecting Canadians with the military, particularly university students who are expected to take leadership roles in various sectors of society in the years after graduation.
Some of those in the documentary seem unlikely military supporters, such as former NDP leader Ed Broadbent, who went through Air Force officer training while in university.
"It was heaven," he said.
Queen's is a partner in the project and Doug Bland, the chair of defence management studies at the School of Policy Studies, noted that while the military has reached out to ordinary Canadians in past years -- witness the thousands of people who spontaneously line Highway 401 when the bodies of Canadian soldiers are returned from Afghanistan -- university campuses are the one place the military is conspicuously absent.
"We're in a situation right now where almost no one in university has any connection to the military," he said.
More:
http://www.thewhig.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1569320
