Ukrainian Canadian internment

Commemorative plaque and a statue entitled "Why?" / "Pourquoi?" / "Chomu?", by John Boxtel at the location of the Castle Mountain Internment Camp, Banff National Park.

The Ukrainian Canadian internment was part of the confinement of "enemy aliens" in Canada during and for two years after the end of the First World War, lasting from 1914 to 1920, under the terms of the War Measures Act.

Canada was at war with Austria-Hungary and about 4,000 Ukrainian men and some women and children of Austro-Hungarian citizenship were kept in twenty-four internment camps and related work sites – also known, at the time, as concentration camps.[1] Their savings were confiscated until they were released. Almost all were paroled from camps in 1916–17 to become paid workers on farms, mines and railways, where labour was scarce. Another 80,000 were left at large but were registered as "enemy aliens" and obliged to regularly report to the police.

Internment

During the First World War, a growing sentiment against "enemy aliens" had manifested itself amongst Canadians. The British government urged Canada not to act indiscriminately against subject nationalities of the Austro-Hungarian Empire who were in fact friendly to the British Empire.[2] However, Ottawa took a hard line. These enemy-born citizens were treated as social pariahs, and many lost their employment. Under the 1914 War Measures Act, "aliens of enemy nationality" were compelled to register with authorities. About 70,000 Ukrainians from Austria-Hungary fell under this description. 8,579 males and some women and children were interned by the Canadian Government, including 5,954 Austro-Hungarians, most of whom were probably ethnic Ukrainians.[3] Most of the 8,600 people interned were young men apprehended while trying to cross the border into the U.S. to look for jobs; attempting to leave Canada was illegal.[4] Most of the interned were poor or unemployed single men, although 81 women and 156 children (mainly Germans in Vernon and Ukrainians at Spirit Lake) had no choice but to accompany their menfolk to two of the camps, in Spirit Lake, near Amos, Quebec, and Vernon, British Columbia. Some of the internees were Canadian-born and others were naturalized British subjects, although most were recent immigrants. Citizens of the Russian Empire were generally not interned.

Commemorative statue entitled "Never Forget" / "Ne Jamais Oublier" / "Nikoly Ne Zabuty", by John Boxtel, and damaged plaque at the cemetery of the Kapuskasing Internment Camp; Kapuskasing, northern Ontario.[5]
Commemorative stone at the Saskatchewan Railway Museum, formerly "Eaton Siding" near the Eaton Internment Camp, one of twenty-four, where 8,579 civilians were interned. It reads “Fortitude. To the memory of those who were interned at this site during the Great War. Eaton Internment Camp 1919.”

Many of these internees were used for forced labour in internment camps.[6]

There was a severe shortage of farm labour, so in 1916–17 nearly all of the internees were paroled.[7] Many parolees went to the custody of local farmers. They were paid at current wage rates, usually 20 cents per hour, with fifty cents a day deducted for room and board. Other parolees were sent as paid workers to railway gangs and mines.[8] The internees turned over all their cash to authorities – $329,000 in total, of which $298,000 was returned to them on release.[9]

Camps

Conditions at the camps varied, and the Castle Mountain Internment Camp[10] – where labour contributed to the creation of Banff National Park[11] – was considered exceptionally harsh and abusive.[12] The internment continued for two more years after the war had ended, although most Ukrainians were paroled into jobs for private companies by 1917. Even as parolees, they were still required to report regularly to the police authorities. Federal and provincial governments and private concerns benefited from the internees' labour and from the confiscation of what little wealth they had, a portion of which was left in the Bank of Canada at the end of the internment operations on June 20, 1920.[13] A small number of internees, including men considered to be "dangerous foreigners", labour radicals, or particularly troublesome internees, were deported to Europe after the war, largely from the Kapuskasing camp, which was the last to be shut down.

Of those interned, 109 died of various diseases and injuries sustained in the camp, six were killed while trying to escape, and some – according to Sir William Dillon Otter's final report – went insane or committed suicide[14] as a result of their confinement.

A list of the camps follows:[15]

Name of Camp / Location Date of opening Date of closing Description
Montreal, Quebec August 13, 1914 November 30, 1918 Immigration Hall
Kingston, Ontario August 18, 1914 November 3, 1917 Fort Henry
Winnipeg, Manitoba September 1, 1914 July 20, 1916 Fort Osborne Barracks / Fort Garry
Halifax, Nova Scotia September 8, 1914 October 3, 1918 The Citadel
Vernon, British Columbia September 18, 1914 February 20, 1920 Provincial Government Building
Nanaimo, British Columbia September 20, 1914 September 17, 1915 Provincial Government Building
Brandon, Manitoba September 22, 1914 July 29, 1916 Exhibition Building
Lethbridge, Alberta September 30, 1914 November 7, 1916 Exhibition Building
Petawawa, Ontario December 10, 1914 May 8, 1916 Militia Camp / Tents
Toronto, Ontario December 14, 1914 October 2, 1916 Stanley Barracks
Kapuskasing, Ontario December 14, 1914 February 24, 1920 Bunk Houses
Niagara Falls, Ontario December 15, 1915 August 31, 1918 The Armoury
Beauport, Quebec December 28, 1914 June 22, 1916 The Armoury
Spirit Lake, Quebec January 13, 1915 January 28, 1917 Bunk Houses
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario January 13, 1915 January 29, 1918 The Armoury
Amherst, Nova Scotia April 17, 1915 September 27, 1919 Malleable Iron Works
Monashee-Mara Lake,
British Columbia
June 2, 1915 July 29, 1917 Tents & Bunk Houses
Fernie-Morrissey,
British Columbia
June 9, 1915 October 21, 1918 Rented Premises
Banff-Castle Mountain and Cave & Basin, Alberta July 14, 1915 July 15, 1917 Dominion Park Building at Cave & Basin, Tents at Castle Mountain
Edgewood, British Columbia August 19, 1915 September 23, 1916 Bunk Houses
Revelstoke-Field-Otter, British Columbia September 6, 1915 October 23, 1916 Bunk Houses
Jasper, Alberta February 8, 1916 August 31, 1916 Dominion Parks Buildings
Munson, Alberta-
Eaton, Saskatchewan
October 13, 1918 March 21, 1919 Railway Cars
Valcartier, Quebec April 24, 1915 October 23, 1915 Militia Camp / Tents

Legacy

Memorial at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, east of Edmonton, Alberta. Includes a map showing the locations of the internment camps across Canada. Dedicated on August 11, 2002.

Since 1985, the organized Ukrainian-Canadian community has sought official acknowledgment for this World War I internment, conducting a campaign that underscored the moral, legal and political obligation to redress the historical wrong.[16] The campaign, spearheaded by the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association (UCCLA), included the memorialization of places of internment as historic sites. Currently there are twenty plaques and memorials across Canada commemorating the internment, including two at the locations of former concentration camps in Banff National Park. These have been placed by the UCCLA and its supporters.

In 1994 Yurij Luhovy and the National Film Board of Canada released a feature-length documentary about the internment operations entitled Freedom Had a Price.[17] While shooting the film, Yurij discovered never before seen pictures of the camps and donated them to the National Archives of Canada.

On November 25, 2005, the Senate of Canada voted unanimously to pass Bill C-331, the 'Internment of Persons of Ukrainian Origin Recognition Act', closely following the vote of the House of Commons on November 23, 2005 and it received Royal Assent.[18] This act acknowledges that persons of Ukrainian origin were interned in Canada during the First World War and legally obliges the Government of Canada to negotiate "an agreement concerning measures that may be taken to recognize the internment" for educational and commemorative projects.

Thought to be the last known survivor of the internment measures – Mary Manko Haskett – was only a child of 6 when she was interned with her family at Spirit Lake. She died in July 2007. In 2007 another survivor – Mary Hancharuk, born in the Spirit Lake camp – was found;[19] aged 92, making her the last known survivor of the internment operations. She died in 2008.

Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund

On May 9, 2008, the Canadian government established a $10 million fund.[20] The Endowment Council of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund uses the interest earned on that amount to fund projects that commemorate the experience of thousands of Ukrainians and other Europeans interned between 1914–20 and the many others who suffered a suspension of their civil liberties and freedoms. The funds are themselves held in trust by the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko.

On September 12, 2009 the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund (CFWWIRF) was announced formally with a notice published in The Globe and Mail[21] describing how individuals or groups can apply for funding for commemorative, educational and cultural activities recalling Canada's first national internment operations.[22]

One of the first projects funded by CFWWIRF was the documentary Jajo's Secret directed by filmmaker James Motluk and broadcast on OMNI TV in 2009.[22] This movie tells the story of Motluk's discovery of a parole certificate issued to his late grandfather, Elias, in 1918.

The "Kingston Symposium" of the CFWWIRF's Endowment Council was held in Kingston, Ontario on June 17–20, 2010, bringing together community activists, descendants, academics and artists to discuss ways and means for commemorating Canada's first national internment operations.[22]

Construction of the 'Spirit Lake Camp Interpretive Centre' was launched in July 2010[23] and on November 26, 2011 opened officially in a ceremony attended by the Honourable Jason Kenney, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, who referred to the internment operations as "a blight" on Canadian history. The CFWWIRF's Endowment Council made the funding of this interpretive centre one of its top granting priorities, budgeting $400,000 over five years for this project. A permanent exhibit on Canada's first national interment operations was opened at the Cave and Basin National Historic Site in Banff National Park in September 2013 by Jason Kenney, Minister of Employment and Social Development and Minister for Multiculturalism.[24]

On August 22, 2014 one hundred bilingual English-French plaques were unveiled to recall the 100th anniversary of the implementation of the 1914 War Measures Act and the start of internment operations across Canada.[25]

See also

References

  1. "Internment of Ukrainians in Canada 1914-1920". Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  2. Luciuk 2006, p 50.
  3. Kordan 2002, pp 16–51.
  4. Frances Swyripa, and John Herd Thompson, eds. Loyalties in Conflict: Ukrainians in Canada During the Great War (1983) p 4
  5. "100 years since first death in Kapuskasing internment camp". Sudbury: CBC News. June 3, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  6. Kordan 2002, pp 90–115.
  7. Swyripa and Thompson, eds. Loyalties in Conflict: Ukrainians in Canada During the Great War (1983) p 14
  8. Lubomyr Y. Luciuk and Stella Hryniuk, eds. Canada's Ukrainians: Negotiating an Identity pp 288-303 (1991) pp 297-98
  9. Luciuk and Hryniuk, eds. Canada's Ukrainians (1991) p 298
  10. Article 26 June 1915 Crag & Canyon - "Internment Camp Started"
  11. Article 19 June 1915 Crag & Canyon - "Internment Camp Formed"
  12. Kordan & Melnycky 1991.
  13. Kordan & Mahovsky 2004, pp 27–41.
  14. Suicide attempt at Cave & Basin camp
  15. source: Report on Internment Operations Canada • Report By Major-General Sir William Otter, K.C.B., C.V.O • Ottawa, Thomas Mulvey
    Internment Operations, 1914 1920 Director Internment Operations Printer To the King's Most Excellent Majesty, 1921
    Canada's first national internment operations, 1914-1920
  16. Kordan & Mahovsky 2004, pp 45–62.
  17. Please see the film's page at Luhovy's website.
  18. "Bill C-331". openparliament.ca. 25 November 2005. Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  19. "Internment camp survivor found" (retrieved February 10, 2014)
  20. "About the Fund" (official website). The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund and The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko. 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  21. The Globe and Mail national edition, September 12, 2009 (Focus & Book section).
  22. 1 2 3 "Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund" (official website). The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund and The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko. 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  23. "Launch of Quebec Internment Spirit Lake Interpretive Centre" (PDF). press release. Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund. July 2010. Retrieved February 28, 2014.
  24. "Enemy Aliens, Prisoners of War: Canada's First World War Internment Operations, 1914-1920". Exhibition. Public Works and Government Services Canada. 2013-09-06. Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  25. For a complete list of all of the "Сто" (Sto, "One Hundred") plaque sites please go to http://www.uccla.ca/CTO_100plaques.htm.

Further reading

Comparative studies

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