Barbed Wire

Ukrainian Canadians

House of Commons Debates
7 June 1990

Barbed Wire

ThumbNail Image  

Internees at Kapuskasing internment camp, circa 1917. (Photo courtesy of the Ron Morel Museum)

Mr. Joe Fontana (London East): Mr. Speaker, between 1914 and 1920, approximately 8,500 Ukrainian Canadians were interned in 26 concentration camps across Canada. Just because they came from an area of the world under the Austro-Hungarian empire, they were used as forced labour in internment camps and had their property confiscated and never returned.

In October 1988, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress submitted a proposal to the Canadian government for the acknowledgement of and the symbolic redress for this injustice. This three-page proposal has taken over 18 months to study, and still this government is incapable of a response.

This is a legitimate concern and this government has the responsibility to respond. This is an issue about fundamental civil liberties, and it is important to all Canadians. This government must show a commitment to addressing these concerns by responding with action instead of silence.

Canadians must right a wrong. The federal government must right that wrong for them.

Barbed Wire

Icon Icon Icon

Barbed Wire

Local Links:

Icon Return to Righting An Injustice Page
Icon Return to Internment of Ukrainians in Canada 1914-1920 Page
Icon Return to Ukrainian History Page
Icon Return to InfoUkes Home Page


Document Information

Document URL: http://www.infoukes.com/history/internment/booklet02/doc-101.html

Copyright © 1994 Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association

Copyright © 1994 Lubomyr Luciuk

We acknowledge the help in the preparation of this document by Amanda Anderson

Page layout, design, integration, and maintenance by G.W. Kokodyniak and V. Pawlowsky

Copyright © 1996-1997 InfoUkes Inc.
E-mail: internment@infoukes.com

Ukes-O-Meter

since Mar 1 1997
InfoUkes Inc.
Suite 185, 3044 Bloor Street West
Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada M8X 2Y8
Tel: (416) 236-4865 Fax: (416) 766-5704

Originally Composed: Wednesday December 4th 1996.
Date last modified: Thursday October 30th 1997.