Canada’s Reputation with CMHR
Oksana Bashuk Hepburn
Knowledgeable sources inform that the Ukrainian
Canadian Congress is considering an award for Prime Minister Harper in recognition
for contributions to
Most would
agree that
The violations
were not lost on
Of particular
significance was Mr. Harper’s visit to the Holodomor monument dedicated to some
ten million victims of the artificial famine ordered by the Kremlin. Most Canadians know about the evil perpetrated
by the Nazis; few, however, are aware of the genocide organized by leaders of the
Communist Party, in particular Joseph Stalin and Lazar Kaganovich, to starve the
autochthon population and resettle the land with non-Ukrainian supporters of the
Communist regime.
The genocide
had been suppressed for decades although scholars like Robert Conquest and more
recently, Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands,
So far so
good, but now things get unpleasant.
Contrary
to Parliament’s intent, the Canadian Museum For Human Rights, a government body
devoted to the promotion and education of human rights, decided to treat the Ukrainian
genocide differently. Museum documents indicate
recidivism and whitewashing. For example,
only a single photo - on its electronic display - will acknowledge this monstrous
crime. More space may be allocated on a rotational
basis: perhaps once in a decade? The Nazi
genocide, on the other hand, has a dedicated and permanent exhibit exclusively to
itself.
The CMHR,
a Canadian Crown Corporation reporting to the Minister of Heritage, has a mandate
“…to enhance the public’s understanding of human rights, to promote respect for
others and to encourage reflection…” Its supporting material is praiseworthy in its
promise to deal with “questions of conscience”, focusing on “the right to participate”,
and working to ensure its ‘branding’ works towards achieving “a world in which everyone
is respected and valued”. But such words
become annoying propaganda when measured against the Museum’s current approach:
diminishing the importance of one of history’s greatest evils.
The Ukrainian
community is aghast that such blatant discrimination is possible in fair-minded
And another
insult. The Museum resides in Winnipeg, a
city where about one-in-four citizens come from Ukrainian roots, first put down
here in Canada after arriving exactly 120 years ago this year.
One can only
hope that the Museum’s decision-makers will come to their senses and cancel any
contracts furthering this error of judgement. Otherwise, any well-intended award for the Prime
Minister falls under a pall. Even worse,
the Museum undermines
Oksana Bashuk Hepburn was a Director of Communications at the Canadian Human
Rights Commission