Ara Shimoon

Educator | Communicator | Photographer

Page 26 of 41

#Sunnyside365 November 19, 2015

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“Twenty-nine years we’ve been in business. You know ‘Grass Roots’ down on 10th, that was our first location. Where ‘Fresh’ is was our second. We moved here in late 2000/early 2001.

This building used to be a Baptist Church–it was built about 1907. There was a lady named Mrs. King, apparently she was one of the first black women who lived in Sunnyside, she used to sing at the church and people would sit on their porches and listen to her because she could really belt it out and I guess that was the only entertainment of the time. I guess without any cars or traffic noise, it would have been easy to hear.

Roughly in 1970 it was deconsecrated and shortly afterwards it was a hippy art collective, a theatre, a Korean grocery store and, prior to my arrival, a wedding boutique. They built the Tae kwon-Do place about then.

It’s my thirtieth year in this neighbourhood.” Norm Person, Owner, Lifesport

#Sunnyside365 November 18, 2015

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“I’m working on my Master Thesis in Social and Cultural Anthropology through the University of Vienna. The first thoughts for my Thesis was to study this city. Then I came across the BRZ concept and as soon as I got here, I thought I would start with Kensington. However, the more I talked to people, it felt more natural to study this neighbourhood closely. So I’m studying what makes this neighbourhood so unique: the business owners, the residents, the people.

When I first saw Calgary, I was terrified. My friend and I were driving from Whitehorse, down to Vancouver, through the mountains to Calgary and then on to Newfoundland. We were in Calgary and were broke and I had to find a job. I found a job in Kensington and we made enough to make our way through to Newfoundland. Not long after I returned to Calgary for a few weeks.

What I love about this neighbourhood is that I can come back and visit the places five years apart and it’s the same faces, the same regulars. It really is a special place in the world.” Marieluise. #Sunnyside365 would like to wish her good luck with her Master Thesis as she returns to Vienna the same day as this post!

#Sunnyside365 November 17, 2015

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“The Tiny Gallery project builds small, enclosed plinths on pedestrian-friendly Calgary streets. By bridging the gaps between street art, gallery art, and public art, this project promotes local artists, makes art more accessible to the general public, and encourages pedestrians to explore Calgary.

In keeping with our tiny scale placemaking experiments in Sunnyside, the Pooh Corner Tinier Gallery will feature art by ‘tiny artists’ over the next year (plus the occasional grown-up artist). If you know (or are) an artist aged 5–17 who would like to exhibit, please email poohcorner@picolina.net.” Tiny Gallery on 1st Ave in Sunnyside.

#Sunnyside365 November 16, 2015

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“Well, I suppose we’ve had it good so far. It’s coming down pretty hard in the mountains where it belongs. A few inches of snow isn’t bad, especially when you think about how we’ve had the sunniest days where it counts the most.”

#Sunnyside365 November 15, 2015

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“Perhaps when you’ve been walking or biking around town you’ve seen little boxes full of books in neighbourhoods all around Calgary. These Little Free Libraries are are really fun initiative that’s been popping up in cities all over North America. The concept is simple: you leave a book or two that you don’t need anymore and then borrow books that your neighbours have left. It’s a great way to not only encourage reading with your kids, but to also get them out and about in the neighbourhood.

You can also get more information about the Little Free Library movement at the LittleFreeLibrary.org website.” A bench outside of the Pooh Corner Little Free Library on 1st Avenue NW

#Sunnyside365 November 13, 2015

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“There’s a nice sense of community that we love about this neighbourhood and that’s one of the things that drew us to starting our businesses here. It’s a little village. You can walk down the street and grab a coffee, grab some lunch, do some shopping, all in a four block radius.

We were one of the first privatized liquor stores in Canada.

We were named runner up for Whisky Retailer of the Year 2015, by Whisky Magazine in their “Icons of Whisky – Rest of the World Category” (excludes Scotland and the US). We took 2nd place behind “Berry Bros and Rudd”, which is a high honour considering BBR is also an independent bottler and owns the Glenrothes single malt brand. We are the only Canadian store to have been so considered, as we have been the last 3 years!

This is more than just a shop, there’s a lot of people who like to come in every couple of days that like to just chat with the staff because we’re local.” Andrew Ferguson, Owner, Kensington Wine Market

#Sunnyside365 November 12, 2015

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“It’s a multi-disciplinary clinic. My focus has been a better quality of life for my patients, a lifelong quest for for better health. That’s where the name of the clinic comes from “Healthquest.” As soon as I graduated I opened this place. I have really been luck that my main team has been with me quite a long time. As of January it’ll be eleven years in this office.

We have five practitioners: myself as the chiropractor, one naturopath, and three massage therapists.

I love this neighbourhood. It feels like a small town in the middle of the city. The people here are always talking about how they mingle with their neighbours–for the businesses it’s the same thing. We all get to know each other. It’s also an active neighbourhood which is what I really love about it. Lots of walking, running paths, cyclists, that sort of thing. I treat patients from all over the city because everybody wants to come to Kensington.” Dr. Miranda Moen, left.

“I’ve been a massage therapist for about four and a half years. I’ve been in this clinic for about four of those years. I love the vibe of this neighbourhood. I love that there’s lots of shops and it’s a fun place to be.” Laura Dart, Massage Therapist, right.

#Sunnyside365 November 11, 2015

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“I’m ninety-two years old. I like old people, that’s why I married my wife. She’s ninety-four years-old. We’ve been together for sixty-three years.

I joined up on August 6, 1942 and was discharged on October 8, 1945. I was a wireless operator with Lord Strathcona’s Horse, a Calgary tank regiment. I made 25 cents a day.

We trained in England for a year and on November 11, 1943 we went for service through Gibraltar. On the way there, part of our convoy was sunk. It was supposed to be a Military Hospital, but it ended up at the bottom of the sea. They put us up in Algiers for a while, and then sent us to Naples, Italy.
On my twenty-first birthday we took a train to Ancona and that’s where we met the war. After we liberated Italy, they sent us north to Holland.

Yes, this shrapnel is the nose of a 500 pound bomb that was dropped on us the day after probably the major battle of Italy in the Second World War for Canadians, which was the breakthrough of the Melfa River, when in one day we lost a third of our tanks and a third of our officers. A Victoria Cross, and a Distinguished Service Order and Distinguished Conduct Medal and several medals were given for that operation because we really broke through the German lines, which they didn’t expect to.

The Germans were such disarray that the next night they sent bombers over, and this is the nose of a bomb that dropped from probably 14,000 feet and landed 10 yards from our tank and the ground was hard that spring, very hard, like concrete and despite that, the bomb drop dug a crater six feet deep and probably 20 feet across, and missing our tank by probably 15, 20 yards, something like that.

As soon as the Rhine was crossed and the pontoon bridge built, we pushed our tanks across at Emmerich [am Rhein, Germany] and went back into Holland. Probably the most exciting battle, certainly in Holland, was Operation Dutch Cleanser [part of the Liberation of Arnhem, April 12-16, 1945], which was from Arnhem on the side of Nederrijn [river] to Zuiderzee [inlet of the North Sea], probably, oh, a 60, 70 kilometers maybe. And with the orders we were given, within 5th Division, was to get through at all possible costs. There was probably half a million German troops in western Holland, and also V-bomb [V-1 Rockets] bases which were bombing London. So as soon as we got across there, that would finish all that.

So we went so fast, we didn’t take any infantry and that’s very rare for tanks to go without infantry because you’re very vulnerable. A man could be sitting in a ditch with a bazooka and knock a tank out. We went so fast, we outran our food echelons. And the Dutch people, who were eating tulip bulbs that winter, fed us with putting eggs and milk into our tanks as we came down the road. And that really got to us. Dutch people were just fabulous. And when we got to Emmelo, which is a little town short of Harderwijk [Netherlands], and the heavy fighting before that, a lot of tanks knocked out, and all of a sudden, Jerry took off. And in the town square, we moved our tanks in and within minutes, there were probably a couple of thousand people.

I have pictures of girls climbing all over our tanks, you could hardly see the tank. And I got up in the turret and started the people singing, “Wilhelmus van Nassouwe ben ik, van Duitsen bloed,” which is the Dutch national anthem. And there wasn’t a dry eye to the place, 2,000 people. They hadn’t been able to sing for five years.

The education that many of us received that we never would have, had there not been a war, because we couldn’t afford it. Also, the tremendous bond of affection between Holland and Canada because of the liberation and the kindness of Dutch people who were eating tulip bulbs in the winter, and then feeding us with milk and eggs that spring when we came through. I am anti-gun. So we raised four children in our family, and I said to my wife, I said, “There will be no guns in this house.” And she said, “Well, you’re crazy, they’ll play with their guns with their friends at school.” I said, “That may be, but there will be no guns in this house.” So this is the line I have taken with going to different schools, that guns I don’t think accomplish anything. And so yeah, I was so highly trained, I could take a Bren gun apart with my blindfold, and we had to do that, and put it together again and all the other weapons too. But so I know where weapons are, I’ve been there, but I don’t think this is an answer, so I’m very anti-gun.

I suppose this probably had some influence on my later decision, somewhat later, to enter, to study for holy orders to be a priest. To see many men who were much better than I would be if I lived to be 100 killed, so it caused me to ask, you know, what is the purpose of my life. And not that you couldn’t have a purpose in life as a ditch digger or as an engineer or as a fireman or whatever, but I felt that my particular vocation here was to be a priest, m’hmm.” Father RHS Greene. A remarkable man, Father Greene, or ‘Padre’ as he likes to be called, still lives in his home in Sunnyside and visits the Kensington Legion to spend time with all the ‘young kids’–other seniors who are younger than him. 

#Sunnyside365 November 10, 2015

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A note on this photo reads:

“JOHN WAS FROM CANMORE ALBERTA.

JOHN WAS RIDING IN ATRUCK AT THE REAR OF A SLOW MOVING TRUCK CONVOY. HE WAS ASKED TO DELIVER A NOTE TO THE LEAD TRUCK TO FIND OUT WHY THE CONVOY WAS MOVING SO SLOWLY.

HE JUMPED OFF THE BACK OF THE TRUCK AND WAS KILLED BY A LAND MINE.

HE WAS 19.”

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