Allegations Unfounded and
Innocent
By
Lubomyr Luciuk
He was always innocent. But it took more than
a decade to get that confirmed. Last month Cabinet ruled that Wasyl Odynsky
will not be denaturalized and deported despite having been demonized as a
“Nazi” and a “collaborator” for over ten years.
Wasyl was just a teenager
when the Second World War began. Press-ganged into a guard unit at the Trawniki
labour camp, he tried to escape. Recaptured, he was told that if he attempted
desertion again his entire family would be punished severely. Later, he was
transported to
At war’s end, Wasyl found
shelter in a Displaced Persons camp, unwilling, like most political refugees,
to return to the Soviet-dominated end of
Certainly, no one disputes
that Mr. Odynsky has lived an exemplary life in
Why Cabinet has decided not
to expel Odynsky is unknown. Perhaps they recognized the simple truth that
stripping someone of Canadian citizenship should be a serious matter,
contemplated only when there is credible evidence of criminal wrongdoing. There
is not any in Odynsky’s file.
Unfounded allegations did
expose Odynsky, his family, and even his community, to many indignities.
Unfortunately,
If, however, advocates of
denaturalization and deportation get their way, and this illiberal method
continues to be applied, it should be used, at least, without prejudice. There
are self-confessed veterans of the notorious Soviet secret police - the NKVD,
SMERSH and KGB, enjoying pensions here. Some arrived just after the war, just
like Wasyl. Were they screened as carefully as he allegedly was? If so, they
must have lied about their wartime activities. Since, by their own published
accounts, their service to Stalin included torturing and murdering, one must
ask - what are they still doing here?
As I have never met a
Canadian who wants this country to house any war criminals, particularly real
ones, the RCMP should be investigating how murderous Communists came to be
living amongst us. I, for one, would be happy to see them all rounded up and
expelled, whence they came. They were killers. Wasyl was not. That is why he
can stay.
Professor Lubomyr Luciuk
wrote “Searching for Place: Ukrainian Displaced Persons,