This soldier from northern Ontario is overseas fighting for the Ukrainian forces
CBC News | Posted: November 17, 2024 12:00 PM | Last Updated: November 28
Brittney Shki-Giizis took a leave of absence from the Canadian military to join the fight in Ukraine
A Timmins mother says her family is doing its best to stay positive as her daughter is bringing her military background to the fight in Ukraine.
Colleen Ludgate's daughter, Brittney Shki-Giizis, joined the Canadian military with the intent to go into active combat.
"My first reaction would have been to try and convince her otherwise," Ludgate said.
"But I know Brittney, and when she has set her mind on something, there's no stopping her."
"Most of all, we want her to know that we are here supporting her, not trying to convince her to stop doing what she feels called to do," Ludgate said.
Shki-Giizis rose to the rank of captain in the Canadian Armed Forces, but still had her hopes set on joining the infantry.
Last year, she travelled to Poland and was part of a team that trained Ukrainian soldiers on how to use tanks the Canadian military had donated.
"When she was there, she just absolutely fell in love with the people and the culture and everything about it," Ludgate said.
After that experience, she decided to take a leave of absence from the CAF and joined the Ukrainian Foreign Legion, a military unit of ground forces in the country made up of foreign volunteers.
Since she's been deployed in the country, she has seen combat most days.
"Every now and then we can actually get on a phone call with her," Ludgate said.
She's well aware of the danger. She faces it head on. - Colleen Ludgate
"But phone calls are a bit difficult because they're very choppy and there's a lot of noise in the background. You can hear the explosions and you just wonder, 'How is she just sitting there so calmly amongst all these explosions?"
Ludgate said her daughter could be deployed in Ukraine for as long as five years, but is likely to return to Canada after two years.
"When she gets up in the morning and she climbs into her tank and she's driving out to the combat zone, for her, that's the greatest feeling in the world," Ludgate said.
"She's well aware of the danger. She faces it head on. She knows that she could die there. She knows that she can be seriously injured, but this is her calling and she won't have it any other way."
Ludgate said one of the most difficult things for her family is that if her daughter dies in Ukraine they won't be able to retrieve her body.
"The armies over there, they can't afford to send her back to us," she said.
"So if she dies there, we can't even bury her."
Corrections:- The lead image in this story was changed after publication. November 28, 2024 3:51 PM