NO!
Canadian soldiers came from virtually every part of Canada. Doubtful if any village, town or city was left untouched by the mass casualties.
To date only 60 non-Canadian soldiers have received the CCS. 53 soldiers of the Republic of Slovenia were awarded the medal on March 8 2006. Prior to that only 7 others had been awarded to a non-Canadian.
They just breathe in the information, like any child....
yes, any child that is born in Canada automatically is a Canadian Citizen
It means any child under the age of 18 fighting for or serving a armed group. Not all child soldiers fight though. Many are sex slaves, scouts, sabatuors and fill other needs.
Aside from various legal blogs for your state, simply getting you state's child support enforcement web site will provide you any new info.
One of the medals was the Victory Medal. Awarded to anyone who was in Britan or any of her colonies surving at the time.
She didn't have any brothers and sisters. She was a only child, a farm girl, and a soldiers wife.
The best place to go is the Canadian Virtual War Memorial, run by Veterans Affairs Canada. It is a searchable data base that will let you find out information on any Canadian killed during any war. You can also use Archives Canada, they have a good searchable database as well.
Canada is part of the UN. Canadian soldiers have been involved in more UN peacekeeping missions, in greater numbers than any other country.
If your main concern is with child support or social security, citizenship and domicile will be of more concern. The Canadian mother and the Pakistani father could be of any racial background at all. Canada and Pakistan are simply their places of birth and place of birth has no bearing on race; anyone of any race can be born anywhere.