Meet the young man determined to hear the stories of 500 veterans
At just 28 years of age, Eric Brunt is in a race against time.
The British Columbia native has resumed his cross-country trek to interview aging veterans. Since 2018, he has interviewed hundreds.
In London, Ont. Tuesday morning, he was setting up interview 470 with 97-year-old naval veteran Jack Kerr.
“This project will allow your great, great, great grandchildren to listen to your story,” Brunt explained to Kerr while setting up.
“Well, that’s kind of nice,” the Londoner, originally from Blenheim, Ont. responded.
Brunt’s cross-country trek is currently funded by the Canadian War Museum and Montreal film company Melki Films. But in the beginning, he set out with his own money, a camper van and a longing to know more about his grandfather.
Eric Brunt, as seen in London, Ont. on Nov. 29, 2022. (Sean Irvine/CTV News London)
He passed away without sharing his story, and that was the start of Brunt's journey.
“Immense curiosity was eating at me, so I thought, ‘Maybe I could make a short film about my grandfather.’ And soon I had all these contacts across Canada, and I thought, 'Gosh I’ve got to make a whole trip across Canada about this.'”
Along with way, Brunt has captured men and women who served in every branch of service — they all tell tales of heroism and survivor guilt.
“I don’t understand why I’m still around, I can’t figure that out,” veteran Al Wallace told Brunt in one of his interviews.
It was an emotion shared Tuesday by Kerr.
“I’ll tell you, I was very blessed,” he said.
A "blessing" is how many veterans describe Brunt’s effort to capture their stories, and they're stories they want to be shared with young people, as Brunt recounts one vet telling him.
Eric Brunt prepares to interview London, Ont. Second World War veteran Jack Kerr on Nov. 29, 2022. (Sean Irvine/CTV News London)
“Please with whatever you’re doing, just make sure the children get to see it. That is what is really important, is that children are able to see these videos of me talking and others talking, because otherwise, it’s really hard to learn what happened,” he said.
Brunt is approaching his goal of 500 interviews. Once complete, they will be shared in a new online database.
The end product will forever provide a portal to a generation which sacrificed for our freedoms.
“I hope that it continues,” shared Kerr, who added, “I certainly want the museum to not flounder but to flourish with all these stories.”
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