Every Beautiful Thing You'd Ever Seen
'A thousand people standing on an overpass and you driving under it.'
Part 1: A Fisherman, a Truck & a Train Horn
By the time Mark, a Nova Scotia commercial fisherman, joined the Freedom Convoy the pandemic had dragged on for nearly two years. By then, many Canadians had accumulated an ample store of resentment, injury, and outrage.
His wife, Joanne, remembers the time he got stopped by the cops after an electronic highway sign advised him he'd left his 'zone.' The cops told him he faced a stiff fine, she says, before they bothered to find out he was driving live lobster to Halifax and therefore had the government's blessing to be on the road.
For the four months prior to the Convoy, both of them - free citizens in a free country who'd declined to take COVID vaccines - had been forbidden to dine inside restaurants, coffee shops, and fast food outlets. The outdoor patios of such establishments remained off limits, along with fitness centers, public pools, arenas, libraries, and museums. When Mark's section of the Convoy pointed its headlights toward Ottawa on January 27th, 2022 both he and Joanne were barred from attending weddings and funerals - even if those events were held outdoors.
Nova Scotia abandoned these discriminatory practices a month later - announcing on February 23rd that proof of vaccination would no longer be required beginning February 28th. What happened in between? The trucker protest happened.
"So anyway, off I went," says Mark. "There was a bunch of 'em going. There was a lot of trucks in it." Their 1,400-kilometer/870-mile route traversed New Brunswick and Quebec before crossing into Ontario.
His commercial truck is registered in Nova Scotia, but each additional province requires its own permit. He dutifully purchased them, yet all the way to Ottawa the weigh stations that inspect such permits were closed, he remembers.
So I got to New Brunswick, the first stop that we made. And I pulled into the place. I think it was a restaurant there, maybe a service station. And this young lady come up to the door, banged on the door. And she said, 'Can you get out?'
I said, 'Yeah, I can get out.' And she just embraced me, just thanked me. She said she lost her job cuz she wouldn't get vaccinated. She had two kids at home, a single mother. And she gave me a hundred dollars.
I said, 'I can't take that from you.'
'No, you're gonna take it because I will feel worse if you don't take it.'
It was unbelievable. And everywhere we stopped there was people doing that kind of stuff.
When asked what he'll always remember about the protest, Mark doesn't hesitate: "Those overpasses. It was just phenomenal. Every beautiful thing that you'd ever seen. A thousand people standing on an overpass and you driving under it."
He blew that train horn each time he approached an overpass, he says. "It was something you'd never seen before and you'll probably never see again. I mean, the whole country come right together."
next installment: Trust Me, I’ll Take You Right Downtown
Wonderful to be reminded of those amazing overpasses, the ridiculous closures of so many places and generosity of everyday Canadians- the single mom and this truck driver.. I also remember the brave restaurant owners who did NOT ask for “vaccine passports” and a marvellous party I organized at a restaurant in Woodbridge after a freedom event where 30 people without passports enjoyed a meal.. the police cruisers were in the parking lot outside and we were enjoying ourselves inside!! The restaurant is - if you are ever in the area and want to support:
That's Italian
Woodbridge
Food & Dining
https://www.thatsitalian.ca/
416-482-5426
Ontario
L4L 3Y9