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Black Watch 'really shaken' by casualty in Kandahar
Reservists rehearse rites for Montrealer
KATHERINE WILTON
The Gazette
Monday, July 24, 2006
CREDIT: JOHN KENNEY, THE GAZETTE
Members of the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada practise the unloading of a casket from an aircraft in preparation for the return of the body of Cpl. Jason Warren of Montreal.
Carrying a flag-draped casket on their shoulders, soldiers from the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada yesterday practised a solemn ceremony they had hoped they would never have to perform.
They were preparing for the return of the body of Cpl. Jason Patrick Warren, a highly regarded soldier who died Saturday in Afghanistan after his armoured vehicle was attacked by a suicide bomber.
Several young reservists, some in civilian clothes and others sporting the Black Watch's traditional red hackle (regimental feather), carried the casket around the armoury's parade square.
Cpl. Brian Hill said he had been looking forward to hoisting a few pints with Warren.
The gregarious 29-year-old was to return to Montreal in mid-August following his six-month deployment.
Instead, Hill spent yesterday morning talking about how much Warren loved his job and his fellow soldiers.
Whether he was outmuscling an opponent in floor hockey or battling enemies in a war zone, Warren earned the respect of his colleagues.
He also had a fabulous grin.
"He was one of the best around here - he was tough in training. He wanted things to go right and he was always looking out for the younger guys," Hill said at the regiment's headquarters on Bleury St.
"But he didn't like the spotlight - that wasn't Jay."
Hill, 28, said his friend was excited about going to Afghanistan, a mission for which he had volunteered.
He was home Saturday afternoon when he received word of Warren's death.
Warren and Cpl. Francisco Gomez, 44, of the Edmonton-based Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, were killed by insurgents not far from the coalition base in Kandahar.
Eight other Canadian soldiers were wounded when a car packed with explosives rammed their armoured vehicle.
A senior member of the Black Watch regiment was meeting yesterday with Warren's parents, who live in Ontario, to discuss funeral arrangements. Warren also has a brother and a sister who is in the army.
National Defence spokesperson Lisa Brooks said yesterday she didn't know when Warren's body will be brought back to Canada or when his funeral will take place.
Reports from Afghanistan yesterday said the bodies of both soldiers were expected to be returned early tomorrow, after a ramp ceremony at Kandahar airfield's runway strip.
Warren's family did not want to speak with the media yesterday, Brooks said.
Warren, who was single, grew up in Quebec City and had lived in Montreal since 1995.
The full-time reservist joined the Black Watch in 1999 and served with the Royal 22nd Regiment in Bosnia in 2002.
Friends said they knew little about his family.
"He didn't talk about the past - mostly about the present," said Master Cpl. Anouk Beauvais, of the 3rd Field Engineer Regiment in Westmount, who trained with Warren before his departure for Afghanistan. She said Warren's death was a big loss for the Black Watch family and the entire Canadian military.
Earlier in the day, Lt.-Col. Tom MacKay, the commanding officer of the Black Watch, came to the armoury to encourage his troops to "stay strong."
"It is very tough - the guys are really shaken," Beauvais said.
In emails sent to Beauvais's boyfriend and his Black Watch buddies, Warren wrote that life in Afghanistan "wasn't so bad and that he would be coming home soon."
After word of his death spread throughout Montreal's close-knit military community, soldiers from other regiments turned up at the Black Watch armoury Saturday night to commiserate with his stunned colleagues. "We laughed about the good times," Hill said.
At the end of the evening, someone wrote a message to Warren in the guest book located in the men's mess. "Shine on us all Warren, you're a star - shine on us all, we will never forget you."
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