Community Historical
Recognition Program Rejected
Ukrainian Canadians have rejected the Government of Canada’s
proposed Community Historical Recognition Program (CHRP), which received Treasury Board approval on June 14. The $24 million historical
recognition program would oblige ethnocultural communities to apply for funding
for projects aimed at recalling past government wrong doings. This fund is to
be administered by the Ministry of Canadian Heritage.
Over 80,000 Ukrainians were branded as “enemy
aliens” during
In an article published in The Toronto Star
yesterday, the Ukrainian Canadian community called upon the Prime Minister to
personally intervene to right this historical injustice: “We are disappointed that the Government of
Canada has ignored its obligation to negotiate a settlement with the Ukrainian
Canadian community,” said Paul Grod,
Vice President of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress.
The Ukrainian Canadian community has called for a
series of commemorative, educational and cultural initiatives to be funded
through a community administered foundation, with an endowment based upon a
determination of the present day value of the economic losses suffered by the
community (approximately $47 million).
Under the approved CHRP framework, in contrast, Dr. Lubomyr Luciuk, a
director of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association, said that
Ukrainian Canadians would, in effect “be required to go cap in hand to ask
Ottawa to give back some of the money they took from the internees, under
duress. Forcing us to do so is unconscionably paternalistic and we have said
so, repeatedly, for years.”
“We call upon the Prime Minister to immediately
intervene to ensure a timely and honourable settlement, as mandated by the
Internment of Persons of Ukrainian Origin Recognition Act, to which he gave his
support in the House of Commons in March 2005, and which received Royal
Assent in November 2005,” said Andrew Hladyshevsky, QC, President of the
Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko, a body created in 1963
through an Act of Parliament. He went on to say: “We would like to secure the
Prime Minister’s personal assistance so that we might together craft a
reconciliation settlement while the last known survivor, Mary Manko, is still
alive. We believe that will reflect well upon this government’s record, as did
Prime Minister Mulroney’s much lauded Japanese Canadian Redress Settlement.”
NP - The Ukrainian Canadian Congress, the Ukrainian Canadian
Foundation of Taras Shevchenko and the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties
Association comprise the Ukrainian community negotiating team for settlement
with the Government of Canada to redress the internment of Ukrainians from
1914-1920 under the War Measures Act.