MP
Bezan on CMHR
Ottawa,
February
2, 2011
- As Member of Parliament for Selkirk-Interlake and a
proud Ukrainian-Canadian, I have been receiving numerous calls and
letters from
members of the Ukrainian community about the proposed content of the Canadian
Museum
for Human Rights (CMHR)…
Specifically,
Ukrainian-Canadians are looking for adequate recognition of the
Holodomor
genocide of 1932-1933, as well as the Canadian internment of Ukrainians
during
World War I in the CMHR. The community is concerned that the Holodomor
will be
lumped into a general section of “Mass Atrocities” which
does not provide autonomy
and permanent recognition of the event in the museum. They are also
worried
that other elements of their history will not receive ample recognition
and be
subsumed under other permanent exhibits promoted by the [Museum]
Content
Advisory Committee Report… [this] by no means determines the
final decision on
content in the CMHR, nor is it government policy.
I
believe recognition of the Holodomor should find a special place in the
Canadian
Museum
for Human Rights... The Holodomor informs our
understanding of the meaning of the word “genocide”. Rafael
Lemkin, considered
the foremost thinker on genocide in the global community, called the
Ukrainian
Holodomor “genocide” in 1953 before anyone else was
willing. As I fought for
federal legislation to recognize the Holodomor and promote a National
Day of
Remembrance, I gained a deep understanding of the harsh realities of
this event
for survivors, but also the attempts by governments around the world to
remain
silent on this regretful history. We should not make the same mistake...
Canada
was the first Western country to recognize Ukraine’s
independence, which attests to the close ties the two
countries enjoy today. And the Canadian Parliament was one of the first
in the
world to recognize the Holodomor as genocide when it supported my
Private
Member’s Bill in 2008.
I
believe that:
-
The Holodomor
genocide should have a unique, autonomous and prominent place in the
CMHR, and;
-
The CMHR Board of
Directors contain respected members of the Ukrainian community with
knowledge
of the Holodomor and other human rights violations.
I
am proud of our government’s support for the Canadian
Museum
for Human Rights. I hope the CMHR Board of Trustees
finds the courage to provide the Holodomor with the appropriate and
respectful
recognition it deserves.