PM Harper Statement on Holodomor


Ottawa (November 21, 2012) - Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued the following statement commemorating the 79th anniversary of the Holodomor:

I invite all Canadians to pause this Saturday [November 24] and honour the millions of men, women and children - mostly Ukrainian, but also some Kazakhs and Russians - who perished during the 1932-1933 famine-genocide perpetrated by the barbaric communist regime of Josef Stalin.

By sending political leaders, clergy and academics to gulags, and cruelly depriving innocent families of the crops and livestock necessary to live, the Soviets sought to extinguish Ukrainian nationalism. 

But the spirit of the Ukrainian people could not be vanquished. Its sons and daughters persevered through those and other dark times to rebuild and ultimately cast off Soviet shackles, fighting for the values we cherish today: freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law.

We are very proud to have more than one million people of Ukrainian descent in our country, many of whom lost loved ones in this atrocious act of malevolence, the Holodomor. Our Government recognizes their loss. In 2008, Canada became the first country to recognize this stain on humanity as an act of genocide… Two years ago, I had the honour of paying my respects to victims at the Holodomor Memorial and Museum in Kyiv, Ukraine …

Vichnaya pamyat (in everlasting remembrance).”