Portraits of Honour Foundation

Portraits of Honour Foundation A Tribute to the Fallen Heroes of the Canadian Afghanistan Campaign And our Canadian First Responders. There is a tremendous amount of work yet to be completed.
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With the Portraits of Honour mural nestled again in the studio space at Kin Canada’s National Headquarters, the national tour has concluded; but the project remains very much alive. We still have over twenty five event hosts working on their event reporting and waiting for their sponsors and donors to make their pledged contributions. In the short term, we are continuing to accept donations and ta

ke orders on the remaining clothing and memorabilia -now at a discounted rate, which were available during the tour. Visit our website for available merchandise. There have been over 116 events in the National Tour and we want to ensure that everyone is recognized for their contribution to the overall project. Without the assistance of clubs, Canadian Forces bases and individuals taking on events, we would not have been able to tour the remarkable “National Treasure” made available by the extraordinary talents of Kinsman Dave Sopha. We accomplished our main goal: At each tour stop we brought Canadians together to remember, honour and celebrate our Canadian Forces. Please our website regularly for other updates as they become available. Again, thank you so much for your continued support of this National Project.

🌺Never forget🇨🇦
06/06/2026

🌺Never forget🇨🇦

🇨🇦 June 6, 1944: The Allied invasion of Northwest Europe begins as Canadian forces land on Juno Beach during D-Day.

Canada commits 14,500 soldiers to the assault, supported by the Royal Canadian Navy’s 100+ ships, thousands of sailors, merchant vessels, airborne troops, and the Royal Canadian Air Force in the skies above. By day’s end, Canadian forces had advanced farther inland than any other Allied formation, despite suffering over 1,000 casualties, including 350 killed.

Credit: Milne, Gibert Alexander

-Day

🌺Sgt (retired)  Mike Rude and his trusty side kicks. Miss Spark and lil Phoenix
06/06/2026

🌺Sgt (retired) Mike Rude and his trusty side kicks. Miss Spark and lil Phoenix

All dressed up and someplace to go!

Honouring their sacrifices today, tomorrow and always🌺
06/06/2026

Honouring their sacrifices today, tomorrow and always🌺

🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
06/06/2026

🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦

On June 6, 1944, over 14,000 Canadians stormed Juno Beach during D-Day, and pushed farther inland than almost any Allied force that day. 🇨🇦

They landed under machine gun fire, artillery, mines, and chaos.
Many never made it off the beach.
But the advance never stopped.

Village by village. Street by street.
Canadian troops fought through Normandy with relentless determination, earning respect from allies and enemies alike.

Juno Beach wasn’t just another landing zone.
It became one of the defining moments in Canadian military history.

Their courage helped change the course of World War II — and proved Canada could stand on its own. 🇨🇦

SAVE THE DATE!!!! Come out and join us for a day of golf and fellowship! The 6th annual " Dave Sopha Memorial" golf tour...
05/28/2026

SAVE THE DATE!!!!

Come out and join us for a day of golf and fellowship!
The 6th annual " Dave Sopha Memorial" golf tournament.

Rest in eternal peace 🌺
05/27/2026

Rest in eternal peace 🌺

It is with great sadness that we mark the passing of Second World War Veteran Percival (Percy) James Smith on May 9, 2026 – just one day shy of his 103rd birthday.

Percy served in the British Merchant Navy between 1942 and 1946. After moving to Vancouver in the late 1970s, he dedicated himself to supporting fellow Veterans. He served as Treasurer, Vice-President and President of the Canadian Merchant Navy Veterans Association, while also helping Veterans apply for benefits, driving them to medical appointments, and organizing fundraisers.

Percy was committed to remembrance, serving on the Veterans' Commemoration Committee of British Columbia, volunteering on Poppy Campaigns, and creating a speakers bureau program to inform students about wartime service.

In 2003, Percy was awarded the Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation.

Rest easy, Percy, and thank you for your service.

🌺
05/27/2026

🌺

The world grows quieter once again as another sacred voice from the Greatest Generation fades into history. 🕊️🇺🇸

John Kinsel Sr., one of the last surviving Navajo Code Talkers of World War II, has passed away at 107 years old — carrying with him memories of war, sacrifice, brotherhood, and courage that very few souls on Earth still understood firsthand.

He served in silence.

Not the silence of fear…
but the silence of duty.

During World War II, while chaos and death consumed the Pacific, John Kinsel Sr. carried one of the most powerful weapons of the war — his language. Across brutal battlefields from Bougainville and Guam to the black volcanic sands of Iwo Jima, he used the Navajo language to transmit coded messages the enemy could never break.

Those words saved lives.

In the middle of gunfire, explosions, fear, and confusion, Navajo Code Talkers became the invisible lifeline of the United States Marines. Every message carried urgency. Every transmission carried trust. Somewhere on those battlefields, Marines survived because men like John Kinsel spoke clearly while the world around them was falling apart.

Imagine the weight of that responsibility as a young man.

So many from that generation were barely more than boys when war found them. They carried radios through smoke and chaos while friends disappeared beside them. They witnessed things too painful to fully explain once peace finally returned.

And yet, they rarely spoke about themselves as heroes.

John Kinsel Sr. was one of those men.

Quiet.
Humble.
Steady.

The kind of man whose courage was measured not in attention or applause, but in service carried out without hesitation.

For decades after the war, much of the world barely knew the story of the Navajo Code Talkers. Their mission remained hidden in silence, their contributions buried beneath classified history while they returned home carrying memories of battles that never truly left them.

But history has a way of eventually revealing its greatest heroes.

Today, the world remembers John Kinsel Sr. not only as a veteran, but as a guardian of culture, courage, and sacrifice. His voice became part of one of the most extraordinary stories of World War II — proof that heritage, language, and identity could help change the course of history itself.

And now, another one of those voices is gone.

Another firsthand witness to Iwo Jima has fallen silent.
Another Marine from the Pacific War has slipped into memory.
Another living connection to World War II has left this world behind.

The silence grows heavier each year.

Soon, there will be no Code Talkers left to tell these stories themselves.
No voices left that remember the fear, the smoke, the brotherhood, and the burden carried by the young men who helped secure victory across the Pacific.

Only stories.
Only memory.
Only our responsibility to remember them.

Rest peacefully now, John Kinsel Sr.

The words you spoke in war helped save countless lives…
and the legacy you leave behind will echo far longer than any battlefield ever could. 🕊️🇺🇸

🇨🇦
05/27/2026

🇨🇦

Canada’s beauty lives not only in its mountains, lakes, and forests, but in the spirit of its people. 🇨🇦

Across generations, Canadians have built a country known for compassion, resilience, creativity, and respect for nature.

This quote reminds us that Canada’s true beauty comes from both its land and the people who call it home.

05/27/2026
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05/27/2026

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Address

99 Wilkes Street
Brantford, ON
N3T4W2

Telephone

+15192404948

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