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Archive for category: Blog

Memorial Scholarship for Orphans established in memory of CMAT volunteer James Caddell

Deployments, James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans, Sirumalar Home for Children
James Caddell

James Caddell

Mr. James Caddell 1973 – 2005

In collaboration with the wishes of James’s wife Tara Newell and his family, a special fund has been set up in memory of James love for underprivileged children and education. It is called the James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans. Funds collected for this purpose will be used to help orphaned children around the world to seek higher education so they will have a chance at life – one of the projects he had planned on starting on his return to Canada. 100% of funds collected will go directly for this cause.

https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Default-Image.jpg 430 860 Valerie Rzepka https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMAT-20th-120.png Valerie Rzepka2005-10-24 17:24:552013-09-08 21:32:25Memorial Scholarship for Orphans established in memory of CMAT volunteer James Caddell

James Caddell: 1973-2005

Deployments, James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans, Sirumalar Home for Children
James Caddell and his Grandfather, both Canadian Forces veterans, at the War Memorial in Ottawa.

James Caddell and his Grandfather, both Canadian Forces veterans, at the War Memorial in Ottawa.

James Lawrence Caddell, selfless CMAT volunteer, died on October 16, 2005 in Tupiza, a small town in Bolivia. James was only 32 and died of pulmonary edema caused by altitude sickness.

The memorial service will be held in Ottawa on November 5, 2005.

He and his wife Tara Newell had been travelling in Bolivia as part of their around the world tour, which they began in June of last year. In that time they travelled across Australia, toured Hanoi and Angkor Wat, assisted in humanitarian work in East Timor, Indonesia and a tsunami orphanage in India, trekked in Nepal, toured Gallipoli and Jerusalem, dined in Provence and learned Spanish in Buenos Aires and Santiago.

For more information and various photos from their trip please visit: http://www.mcgill.ca/news/2005/spring/action/

James was an incredibly accomplished and devoted person, who spent his adolescence in rural Quebec and small town upstate New York. He joined the Royal Canadian Hussars regiment in Montreal while at Dawson and McGill, and served a tour of duty in Bosnia with the UN in 1995.  He was a Normandy Battlefields Scholar and an intern at Pearson Peacekeeping Institute in Nova Scotia, and earned a Master’s degree from Royal Military College in Kingston. He had been on leave from his job as a Senior Program Manager with Human Resources Development Canada. Just before he left, his new regiment in Ottawa, 2nd Intelligence platoon, presented him with the Queen’s Jubilee medal.

A scholarship fund for the impoverished has been set up in his name. It is called the James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans.  100% of the funds collected will be used to help orphaned and impoverished children in South India to obtain an education so they will have a chance at life – one of the projects he had planned on starting on his return to Canada.  For more information, please go to www.canadianmedicalteams.org [*For those donating online, please ensure that you specify in the appropriate field that your donation is to be directed to the James Caddell Memorial Scholarship Fund].

For obituaries from the Globe & Mail and Ottawa Citizen, and full size view of the photos above, please see the links below.

  • PHOTOS: James Caddell
https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Default-Image.jpg 430 860 Valerie Rzepka https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMAT-20th-120.png Valerie Rzepka2005-10-23 17:46:022025-03-30 23:24:49James Caddell: 1973-2005

James Caddell, Soldier and Adventurer (1973-2005)

Deployments, James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans, Sirumalar Home for Children
James Caddell and Tara Newell on their wedding day in 2002.

James Caddell and Tara Newell on their wedding day in 2002.

Former Canadian Forces peacekeeper with a taste for adventure who did a tour of duty in Bosnia and performed tsunami-relief work in India was overcome by altitude sickness in Bolivia, writes Sandra Martin.

Globe and Mail
By Sandra Martin, Saturday, 
October 22, 2005, Page S9

A year ago last September, James Caddell and his wife, Tara Newell, left their government jobs and set off to backpack around the world. Last Saturday, having trekked through five continents, they arrived by local bus in Bolivia, the poorest country in South America. They stopped in Tupiza, famous for its chunky red mountains and salt lakes, and as the final hideout for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

They found a hotel, explored the market and went to a restaurant. Mr. Caddell felt unwell at dinner and went back to the hotel. He jumped in the pool, emerging quickly because the water was so cold, and tried to warm himself in a very hot shower.

Before the night was out, and despite Ms. Newell’s efforts to get him medical help (which included carrying her husband into a local hospital), he was dead.

She thought he had food poisoning or a virulent stomach virus. In the logistical and linguistic nightmare that followed, Ms. Newell managed, with help from the Canadian government, to transport his body to a hospital in La Paz, the capital. That’s where she learned that her husband had died from altitude sickness, accelerated by the rapid changes in his body temperature from the swim/shower routine.

Mr. Caddell, who was extremely fit, had survived a year-long tour in Bosnia as a Canadian Forces peacekeeper. As a couple, they were adventurous but prudent travellers who were well aware of the dangers of altitude sickness. Nine months earlier, he had suffered from altitude sickness on Mount Everest, but that was above 5,000 metres and Tupiza was below 3,000 metres.

Nobody Ms. Newell beseeched for help in the hotel recognized the symptoms. Even worse, there were no oxygen masks or canisters not even in the local hospital.
“In hindsight, it all seems perfectly clear. I was lying next to him while he was suffocating and I didn’t know it,” a heartbroken Ms. Newell said by telephone from La Paz.

His father, Andrew Caddell, a senior policy adviser in the Department of Foreign Affairs, said: “James and I talked a lot about the possibility of him dying abroad as a soldier. He always said, ‘If anything happens to me, I don’t want people to be overwhelmed with grief because it was something I wanted to do.’ And that is how I feel about this trip. He and Tara knew there were risks and they went ahead and did some wonderful things.”

James Lawrence Caddell was born on March 16, 1973, to Norma Lewis, a journalist and communications lecturer (she covered John Lennon’s “bed-in” for peace for the Montreal Gazette in 1969) and Andrew Caddell, one of her former students at Dawson College. As a child, James grew up with his “hippy” mother in the Huntington area of Quebec near the American border and then in upstate New York with her husband, Tom Cummins, and five half-siblings.

James’s father, who was only 20 when his son was born, went on to university and a career in government. He eventually married public servant Elaine Feldman, the mother of his two younger children.

At 10, James reconnected with his father. Writer Denise Chong, who was working for Pierre Trudeau in the 1980s, remembers meeting James and thinking how well-adjusted he seemed, considering his complicated family relationships. As he grew up, James became both a centre point between his father’s and his mother’s family and a bridge connecting their disparate parts.

“He was our cultural and emotional centre,” said Erin Kelly, his oldest sibling, by telephone from La Paz. She and her brother Chris had flown to Bolivia to help Ms. Newell  make arrangements to bring Mr. Caddell’s ashes back to Canada.

After James graduated from Cortland High School near Syracuse, New York in 1991, he moved to Montreal to study at Dawson College and then McGill University. He also joined a reserve unit of the Royal Canadian Hussars regiment. He wanted to honour his paternal grandfather, Philip (Pip) Caddell, a Second World War veteran, and to serve his country because he loved it so much, said Ms. Newell.

At McGill, he enrolled in North American studies, a cross-disciplinary program in history, economics and political science, but later switched to political science and history.  He took a year off in 1995 to train at Val Cartier and to serve in Bosnia with the United Nations peacekeeping forces. This was not a traditional assignment because there was no peace to keep. Consequently, the United Nations altered its mandate to allow soldiers to return fire if fired on and to safeguard protected zones. Mr. Caddell was awarded the Peacekeeping Service and UNPROFOR medals.

In the summer of 1997, he was a Normandy Foundation Scholar, which meant he did a six-week tour of battlefields in northern Europe from Waterloo to the Somme to the D-Day landings in Normandy. He graduated from McGill in 1997 and spent the next year working as an intern at the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre in Nova Scotia, living with his brother Chris in Los Angeles and doing freelance work.

In 1998, he went, as a civilian, to the Royal Military College in Kingston to do a master’s degree in war studies. That is where he met Tara, who was starting a master’s in public administration at Queen’s. Neither of them knew anybody in Kingston, but they kind “of recognized” each other from classes at McGill, said Ms. Newell. In fact, Mr. Caddell knew who she was because he had worked part-time for the Student Society and she had signed his paycheques in her capacity as president.

“He was really smart, really funny and, unlike other men, he was really kind and warm and sensitive,” she said — probably because he grew up with “so many” women. “He was always looking for stability and roots,” while she wanted “to break free” from the stereotypical nuclear family in London, Ontario, with two parents “who had been in love forever,” the dog, the station wagon and an older brother.

They fell in love, moved to Ottawa after they graduated in 2000 and found jobs with the federal government. At the same time, he switched reserve units to the 2 Intelligence Platoon of Royal Canadian Hussars. He never became an officer and referred to himself somewhat ruefully as a “master corporal with a master’s degree.”

Every year, they went on a long canoe trip in Algonquin Park, with Mr. Caddell insisting they go to the “deepest, darkest, farthest corner of the park where they wouldn’t see anybody else.”

In July of 2002, they married and went to Africa for six weeks on their honeymoon. They were both inspired by its diversity, but she was the one who came home with a dream of seeing the rest of the world. Mr. Caddell came up with the savings plan (live on his salary and bank hers) to make it happen. “In our relationship, he was the strategy/ideas guy and I was the logistics/implementer. For some reason, I couldn’t stop dreaming [about the trip] and he put it together for me.”

After seeing Australia and Southeast Asia, they went to Nepal, where they planned to spend Christmas at the last base camp before the summit on Mount Everest. On the way up the mountain, they made a pact that, if one of them developed altitude sickness, the other would continue alone. On Christmas morning, they set off for the base camp at 5,380 metres, but Mr. Caddell became disoriented and the Nepali guide went for help. “It was the second-hardest day of my life,” said Ms. Newell, weeping, explaining that the six hours she spent climbing to the base camp was the longest separation they had had in two years. “I worried the whole time, but when I came back, he was fine.”

The tsunamis hit South Asia the next day. They had already done some relief work in East Timor, but they wanted to do more. They spent two months as volunteers with a Canadian relief agency in the Kannyakumari district of southern India, living with children who had been orphaned by the tsunamis. “It changed everything for us,” she said.

They spent hours talking about the future, his business plans, the orphans they would adopt and their schemes for making the world a better place. “James wanted to come home and be a business success, so he could spend all of his money on charity and support children around the world. I wanted to be in the field, so we had different approaches with the same objective.”

In June, they flew to Brazil and travelled through Uruguay and Argentina, where they studied Spanish for six weeks. “James wanted to go home about Buenos Aires and start having children,” she said, “but I wanted to go as far south as we could go first. He was willing to do it because he loved me and he knew it was my dream.”

They went to Tierra del Fuego, off the tip of South America, and reversed direction. “He was obsessed with turning north,” she said, adding that he was the most patriotic Canadian she had ever met and just moving in a northerly direction excited him. Yesterday, she completed the journey with his ashes.

James Lawrence Caddell was born in Montreal on March 16, 1973. He died of altitude sickness on Sunday morning in Tupiza, Bolivia. He was 32. He leaves wife, Tara Newell; his mother, Norma Lewis his father, Andrew Caddell; and seven half-siblings. A scholarship fund to provide higher education for orphans has been set up in his name with the Canadian Medical Assistance Teams. A memorial service will be announced at a later date.

https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Default-Image.jpg 430 860 Valerie Rzepka https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMAT-20th-120.png Valerie Rzepka2005-10-22 17:55:152013-09-08 21:31:22James Caddell, Soldier and Adventurer (1973-2005)

Second CMAT Medical Team deploys; CMAT awarded $22,000 USD for advanced mobile Field hospital

2005 - Pakistan Earthquake, Deployments
CMAT team #1 at a clinic they established in Bagh.

CMAT team #1 at a clinic they established in Bagh.

October 20, 2005: A twelve-member Canadian Medical Assistance Team’ (CMAT) will deploy on Friday, October 21, 2005 from Pearson International Airport in Toronto leaving on Pakistan International Airlines flight to Islamabad at 1700hrs (Toronto time). The team will work alongside members of the Rotary Club of Islamabad and Rawalpindi to deliver emergency medical relief to quake victims in Pakistan’s northeast as well as assist and support medical staff at hospitals in Islamabad and Rawalpindi that have been deluged with quake victims airlifted from the field.

Read more

https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Default-Image.jpg 430 860 Valerie Rzepka https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMAT-20th-120.png Valerie Rzepka2005-10-20 11:35:372013-08-31 22:17:08Second CMAT Medical Team deploys; CMAT awarded $22,000 USD for advanced mobile Field hospital

CMAT learns of the tragic passing of tsunami volunteer

Deployments, James Caddell Memorial Scholarship for Orphans, Sirumalar Home for Children
James in Tamil Nadu, delivering supplies to orphans at Sirumalar Home for Children. (Early 2005)

James in Tamil Nadu, delivering supplies to orphans at Sirumalar Home for Children. (Early 2005)

CADDELL, James Lawrence
B.A. (McGill), M.A. (Royal Military College) (March 16, 1973-October 16, 2005).

Tragically, in Tupiza, Bolivia. Beloved husband of Tara NEWELL of London. Son in law to Brian and Cheryl Newell of London, and Kay Newell of Creemore, who loved him as their own. Born in Montreal, the son of Andrew Caddell (Elaine Feldman) and Norma Lewis (Tom Cummins).  James was raised near Ormstown, Quebec and later in Cortland, New York.

A decorated soldier and United Nations peacekeeper, James was an accomplished academic and public servant who loved the outdoors, served his country, and had such concern and curiosity about the world around him that he sought to see all of it. He and Tara travelled the world and undertook humanitarian work over the past sixteen months. James was a loving grandson to the late Philip and Elga Caddell, spent summers in Kamouraska, and to Ed CUMMINS and his late wife Ruth in Cortland. He was the best brother to Erin (Charlie,) Chris (Connie) and Siobhan Kelly, Cara and Lucy Cummins in the U.S. and to Emily and Jack Caddell of Ottawa. He leaves to celebrate his life many relatives and Friends around the world. A memorial service will be celebrated in Ottawa later this month.

Donations to Canadian Medical Assistance Teams (www.canadianmedicalteams.org), to support a scholarship fund for children, a cause James cared passionately about.

https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Default-Image.jpg 430 860 Valerie Rzepka https://cmat.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMAT-20th-120.png Valerie Rzepka2005-10-18 21:16:352013-09-08 21:29:09CMAT learns of the tragic passing of tsunami volunteer
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Day 15 of Clinical Ops... CMAT continues delivering emergency care to families impacted by Hurricane Melissa — thanks to incredible community support, we’ve now raised $17k of our $50k goal. ❤️

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