The Canadian soldier who was attacked with an axe in Afghanistan in 2006 reflects on the week when Canada finally became a target
Capt. Trevor Greene, right, who was attacked in Afghanistan in 2005, looks on from behind an honour guard during a ceremony to open Honour House in New Westminster, B.C., on Wednesday November 10, 2010. Honour House is the first home in the country for relatives of Canadian Forces members and first responders to stay while their family members receive medical care. (Darryl Dyck/CP)
On March 4, 2006, Canadian army Capt. Trevor Greene was sitting with the elders of a village in Afghanistan—helmet off as a sign of respect— when a local teen swung an axe into his skull. Greene not only survived the attack, but the former journalist has since written two books and achieved a remarkable physical and mental recovery. In a week that saw two soldiers killed on Canadian soil by extremists, Maclean’s senior editor Jason Kirby spoke with Greene by phone from his home in Nanaimo, B.C.
A: It’s going excellent. I’m getting stronger everyday. I’m walking with a walker; it’s getting better every day.
A: I was shocked. I figured Muslim extremists would strike in Canada, but didn’t know how, and wasn’t prepared for it. Because in war, it’s all around you, and you can go any time. It’s funny, I always thought it was the other guy that was going to get hit. When I was in a roadside bomb explosion, I thought it was my silver bullet—I was going to get out of the war without being damaged. Two weeks later, the axe fell. So I think these guys were totally unprepared.
It’s a great honour to be asked to guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and I thought of how Cpl. Cirillo would have probably woken up early that morning to carefully shine his shoes and polish his brass. Then proudly put his uniform on and maybe practised his rifle drill in his head. And when he got to the tomb, he would have repositioned his glengarry on his head and pulled on those slippery white gloves, maybe willed himself to hold on to the rifle.
A: Oh, man—it’s a symbol of our commitment and our effort. And I think it’s an important symbol. But this was a long time coming, I think.
A: Because we’ve been on the world stage since Afghanistan in a big way. We punched above our weight in Afghanistan, a small army doing a large army task, and doing very well at it. And we’ve sent our special forces and our fighters to Iraq, alongside those of America and some others. It was inevitable we would be attacked from the inside. We have Parliament buildings that are easily accessed, so you can get to our legislators far easier than the Americans and the British.
A: Yes, definitely.
A: I don’t want to make it less democratic. But more vigilant.
A: Soldiers have been putting their lives on the line for the country since the First World War, and we are still. We need your support, now more than ever.
A: Be proud. It’s like they were killed in war. They did not die in vain. Be proud of them, and be comforted by their sacrifice, as much as anybody who has lost a soldier in war does.