Canada's Forgotten Internment Camps

Between 1914 and 1920, thousands of Canadians of Ukrainian and Eastern European descent were imprisoned in internment camps across Canada, simply on the basis of their origins. For decades, their stories were buried under fear and shame. The Canadian government has finally recognized the internment operations, and yet it remains an unknown chapter in our nation's history.

number of articles in series
Internees working

The Internment Operations

  • First Posted: Aug 04 2010 10:36 AM
  • Updated: 3 months ago

Between 1914 and 1920, thousands of Canadian citizens were interned simply because of their heritage. Yet relatively little is known about these operations.

Lubomyr Luciuk, a professor at the Royal Military College of Canada, speaks with The Mark about why the national internment operations were started in the first place, who was affected, and what the repercussions were for Ukrainian and other Eastern European communities across Canada.


Fort Henry, now a UNESCO World Heritage site in Kingston, Ontario, was once the site of an internment camp during the early 20th century. On June 20, 2010, a memorial service was observed at Fort Henry to honour the various Eastern European communities affected by Canada's first national internment operations. Guests included Peter Milliken, MP for Kingston and the Islands, and Ihor Ostash, the Ukrainian Ambassador to Canada.


Lubomyr Luciuk, professor at the Royal Military College of Canada, joins The Mark to speak about how the Ukrainian Canadian community and other Eastern European communities finally received recognition from the Canadian government that internment operations did in fact happen.


Marsha Skrypuch, an author and internee descendant, tells The Mark about her grandfather, who was one of thousands of Ukrainian and Eastern European Canadians who were interned during and after the First World War. She speaks about how her family discovered her grandfather's past and the toll it took on his life.


Canada's first national internment operations remain an unknown part of our country's history. And even though the subject has entered school curricula in all provinces, it's not necessarily being taught by our teachers. Various members of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund Endowment Council, as well as participants in the 2010 CFWWIRF Kingston Symposium, speak about how to better educate the public about the internment of Ukrainian and other Eastern European Canadians.


After the Canadian government interned Ukrainian and Eastern European Canadians between 1914 and 1920, they did the same with Japanese Canadians during Second World War hysteria. Various members of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund Endowment Council, as well as participants in the 2010 CFWWIRF Kingston Symposium, spoke with The Mark about why Canadians need to learn from the past. Their message is that education about Canada's internment operations will hopefully keep further injustices like these from occurring again.

Comments

LATEST NEWS

Kobayashi Wolfs Down 332 Wings in Half-Hour

We're not worthy! We're not worthy!...

American Job Numbers Up, Canadian Numbers Down

Are we beginning to see a reversal in th...

Roseanne Barr Running for President on Green Ticket

Blue-collar comedienne reminds us once a...

Two out of Every Three Tweets Are Useless

But not your precious little snowflake o...

U.S. No-Fly List Doubles in One Year

Three cheers for the ever-expanding defi...

Will The NHL's Concussion Problem Become an Insurance Problem?

Reports suggest insurers don't want to c...

Russian Presidential Candidate Wants To Be 'Tsar'

Fed up with westernizations such as the ...

See the Dark Side of the Moon

... without paying $400 to see Roger Wat...

Facebook Expected To File IPO Today

The world waits to find out how much Zuc...

Neil Young, Steve Jobs and A New iPod?

The boomer pair bonded over their mutual...

German Satellite Just Missed Crashing into Beijing

At this point, our orbit is one giant in...

Romney Trounces Field in Florida Primary

Four states down, 46 to go....

play

FEATURED VIDEO

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks.  Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.

The Life of a News Anchor: Better Than You Thought

This is apparently what news anchors (at least cool ones) do during commercial breaks. Reminiscent of the coordinated dance routines our own news editor Mike Barber performs after a few beers.