Internee Endowment Launched Nationally 
Ottawa (September 14, 2009) - The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund was launched officially September 12 with a notice published in the Saturday national edition of 
The Globe and Mail (Focus & Books section). Thousands of postcards and posters are also being distributed to individuals, public and university libraries and to various ethnocultural
communities across the country providing information about how to apply for a grant to do research, commemorate or otherwise recall what happened to thousands of Ukrainians and
other Europeans during Canada’s first national internment operations of 1914-1920. 
The endowment, valued at $10 million, was established on May 9, 2008 following over two decades of work on the part of the Ukrainian Canadian community. Interest earned on that
 principal shall be distributed annually by an endowment council representing several of the affected communities. The fund is held in trust and managed by the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation
of Taras Shevchenko, in
Winnipeg, itself established by an Act of Canada’s parliament in 1963.
Commenting on the endowment’s goals, Dr. Lubomyr Luciuk, chairman of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association and a member of the council said: 
“The few internees who were alive when we began our campaign for symbolic redress always told us that what was important to them was that other Canadians should learn about
how they had been branded ‘enemy aliens,’ interned, forced to do heavy labour for the profit of their gaolers, disenfranchised and subjected to other state-sanctioned indignities - even though
they were innocent of any wrongdoing.
“The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund fulfills their hope of an acknowledgment for, fundamentally, this initiative is about memory, not money. I am proud that 
I was able to play a role in hallowing all of the internees and in righting an historic injustice, making sure that no other Canadian ethnic, religious or racial minority ever again suffers what
the victims of
Canada’s first national internment operations did.”
For more information on the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund please go to www.internmentcanada.ca 
Please also note the article in Saturday’s Globe and Mail, September 12, page 3, by Elizabeth Church, “Internees’s story can finally be told.”
For more on UCCLA please go to www.uccla.ca