Firefighter attends citizenship ceremony while on front lines of B.C. wildfire
Water Roos, Popkum, B.C.'s fire chief, becomes a Canadian over Zoom from the back of his fire truck
When Walter Roos was planning for the ceremony over Zoom where he would become a Canadian citizen, he expected to attend in business attire while at home in Popkum, B.C., east of Chilliwack.
Instead, after coming to Canada from the Netherlands 18 years ago, Roos was made a Canadian in the back of a firefighting vehicle Monday, dressed in the red uniform of firefighters doing battle with the province's devastating wildfires.
Roos, Popkum, B.C.'s fire chief, has been fighting fires for more than 15 years and is one of the more than 500 called in to tackle the devastating 120-square-kilometre McDougall Creek fire in West Kelowna.
He said when his task force leader found out that he was supposed to attend the ceremony over Zoom, he made sure to plan around it.
"He had the rest of the task force going to different spots, and we picked a spot close to the city so that we could have cell reception properly," Roos said in an interview.
He would become a citizen while parked near Bear Creek.
WATCH | B.C. firefighter talks about becoming a Canadian citizen while on the fire lines:
Roos said he has been planning for years to become a citizen, and the decision during the COVID-19 pandemic to move the process online made things simpler.
"The older you get, the more you feel that you're tied to your community, your system, and you feel the importance of being part of it," he said.
Roos's story was shared by West Kelowna fire Chief Jason Brolund on Monday, and federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller later posted a photo on X, formerly Twitter.
"People are asking me where he's from, and I don't know," Brolund said.
"What I do know is he's going to be from Canada, and that it just gives me goosebumps to tell that story."
Roos said he recognizes people's desire for happier news in the midst of struggles, but he doesn't want his story to overtake the tragedy of the situation.
More than 27,000 people have been forced from their homes by wildfires burning in the province.
Brolund has said as many as 90 structures in West Kelowna and the Westbank First Nation have been destroyed. There is no word yet on when it will be safe for people to go home.
"You're fighting a fire. You're doing your best to try to stop more fires from starting," Roos said.
"But in the meantime, you see really clearly who all lost their everything, their memories, their passions, their everything. It's intimidating."
READ MORE:
- Residents of the B.C. Interior say they're resigned to consistently poor air quality as wildfires threaten communities each summer.
- A B.C. hiker says he was minutes away from "frying" after he narrowly escaped from the Crater Creek wildfire southwest of Keremeos.
- Evacuees from the Kamloops area made their frustrations clear with B.C. Premier David Eby on Tuesday.
- Volunteers are venturing into evacuation areas to rescue pets and reunite them with their owners.
- A man who lost his dream home to fire in the Shuswap region is sharing his story.