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Families of canadian river servicemen interred in Gaza say they need the regime to do sir thomas more to protect their loved ones' remains. Some say they would like to see their relatives — the last Canadian soldiers to be buried overseas — removed from a cemetery that has been repeatedly damaged by the Israel Defense Forces and brought home.
Twenty-two Canadians are buried at the Gaza War Cemetery in the Tuffah district of Gaza City, all of whom lost their lives during the UN's first major peacekeeping operation that began following the Israeli invasion of Egypt in 1956.
How Canadian war graves in Gaza were destroyed
"It's like there's no headstones anymore. It just looks like dirt, gravel, sand," said Lia Bons after viewing before and after aerial images of the site.
"There's nothing standing even of the surrounding homes."
Bons said she was glad her parents were not alive to witness the "total destruction" of their son's last resting place.
Marguerite Picard says she wishes to rebury her brother alongside their parents.
"I'm quite certain that my parents would want my brother to be repatriated," she said. "I would put him next to mom and dad, and have his name written on the headstone, so that people know he's there."
In a Hebrew-language social media post in 2025, the IDF referenced an operation that aimed to collapse what it called a Hamas tunnel near "a cemetery" in Gaza City.
Dust lofts off the ground along lines running between those explosions, suggesting that the blast did run through underground passages.
That imagery shows massive damage to the site even before August 2025, with above-ground structures reduced to rubble.
The IDF posted its video of the demolition operation on the morning of Aug. 7.
No representative of the Canadian government has been able to visit the site, and neither has anyone from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. The local Jaradeh family, who have tended the cemetery for four generations, were forced to flee that area as the IDF advanced. They are now in Egypt.
It was once standard practice to bury Canadian soldiers who died overseas in theatre, but the policy changed in 1970.
The 22 men who died in the UN peacekeeping mission to Gaza and Sinai were the last to be buried overseas.
One of them was Paul Picard, the only son in a family of girls in Beauharnois, Que., who became a pilot officer in the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1964. He soon found himself in the Middle East on the peacekeeping mission that would win a Nobel Peace Prize for its chief advocate, the Canadian foreign minister Lester Pearson.
He flew Dakotas and Twin Otters, delivering supplies to the forces that separated the Israeli and Egyptian combatants in the desert. The young officer became engaged to a British woman living in Beirut.
Picard signed up for a second tour, and as the end of his time in the Middle East approached, he was offered a job by Air Canada flying DC-8s.
Picard was already training the officer who would replace him when his plane developed mechanical issues and crashed soon after take-off.
"One man died on board the plane," said Marguerite Picard. "My brother and another man were able to get out, burned, and roll in the sand to extinguish the flames."
Picard suffered third-degree burns to most of his body.
The government of Canada would only pay for Paul's father to make the trip to Egypt. But local Egyptians raised money to cover his mother's flight as well, and both arrived five days after the crash, just hours before their son died.
IDF says it dug up Canadian soldiers' graves to destroy Gaza tunnel
"Paul was surprised when he heard my mother's voice," said his sister. "He spoke with them, and then he died. As if he was waiting to speak with them to die."
Paul Picard received a large funeral with military honours at the Gaza cemetery. But neither his parents nor his sisters were ever able to return to visit his gravesite.
Lia Bons said her brother Adriaan grew up in a poor Dutch immigrant family, but "had great plans for his future. He wanted to travel and see the world. And I think that's why he joined the army."
Bons was happy to go on the peacekeeping mission, she said, and pictures he sent home included himself riding a camel.
"I think he loved it there," she said.
Bons died when he and another soldier went out to find a man lost in the no-man's-land between Israeli and Egyptian forces.
"Because of the shifting sands there, as he was turning back around, the wheel of the jeep hit a landmine," she said.
Lia Bons and her sister were returning home from school when they saw an unfamiliar car in their driveway.
"I remember [my father] out on the grass outside the house leaning, like kneeling, on the grass and just crying and wailing. Because he's their first-born son, right? Their baby," she said.
Adriaan Bons's father was the only member of the family who was ever able to make the trip to the cemetery, in 1986 — a period of relative quiet in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Lia says the family often missed having a place to visit Adriaan. The destruction of the Gaza cemetery now compounds that.
"It's bad enough that he's buried in a faraway land," she said. "But to be disturbed like that, like, having the cemetery destroyed is just totally … it really hurts my heart. It's devastating. How dare they? How could anyone do that?"
Recent satellite images of the Tuffah area show that the IDF has continued to damage the site.
At some point between April 5 and April 16, the archway to the Canadian plot — which had at least partly survived the explosion of August 2025 — appears to have been destroyed.
"We saw essentially the construction of a massive berm following along the IDF's yellow line [line of control]. We see essentially the Canadian section be completely destroyed," he said.
"The wall is gone, the archway is gone. There's a large dirt berm and a dirt roadway."
She said Global Affairs would not "comment on confidential state-to-state communications among officials," but added that the department "has been in touch with local authorities," without specifying who those authorities were.
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