Today's Remembrance Day ceremonies will mark 100 years since the signing of the armistice that ended the First World War.
People around Niagara will pause to remember the men and women who fought for our freedoms.
Residents will gather at cenotaphs throughout Niagara for Remembrance Day.
To see a list of locations and times, go to our website.
You can also listen to the live broadcast of the St. Catharines Memorial Park Cenotaph ceremony on 610 CKTB starting at 10:30 Sunday morning.
In Ottawa, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan will be at the national ceremony representing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Trudeau is in France where he will attend Armistice Day ceremonies in Paris today, marking the end of the ``war to end all wars.''
Dominion carillonneur Andrea McCrady will play the bells in Parliament Hill at sunset as part of an initiative organized by the Royal Canadian Legion.
Bells will ring out as night falls in one place after another across the country, including at city halls and places of worship, on military bases and ships, and at ceremonies to honour veterans who served during the First World War.
McCrady will play ``The Last Post'' on the Peace Tower carillon, followed by striking the largest bell 100 times, at five-second intervals, which represents the moment in 1918 when bells across Europe tolled as the war came to an end.