39th PARLIAMENT, 2nd SESSION
EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 099
CONTENTS
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Ukrainian Famine and Genocide
Memorial Day Act
Mr. Ed Komarnicki (Parliamentary Secretary
to the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, CPC):
Mr. Speaker, it gives me great honour to rise and speak to Bill
C-459, An Act to establish a Ukrainian Famine and Genocide Memorial
Day and to recognize the Ukrainian Famine of 1932-33 as an act
of genocide.
I have many Ukrainian people in my constituency
in places like Estevan, Weyburn and Bienfait, as does the member
for Regina—Qu'Appelle. We have many Ukrainian people in
Ituna and Wishart, and in many towns, villages and cities in
the province of Saskatchewan represented by many of our MPs.
Since the collapse of the former Soviet Union in 1990, there
has been a growing awareness of the incredible extent of the
crimes against humanity and the harsh consequences of communism.
It has been denied in the west for so many years by academics
and journalists who believed in the moral equivalence of east
and west.
Light has been shone into Soviet archives that have been closed
for decades and we now know more than ever about the crimes
against humanity that occurred during the period when the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ruled over
an empire that stretched from the Baltic Sea to the Sea of Japan.
One of the most horrendous of these crimes against humanity
was the Stalinist genocide against the Ukrainians in 1932-33,
known as the Holodomor, the great hunger or the Soviet terror
famine. This strike against the culture, identity and the very
lives of the people of Ukraine remains to this day a cornerstone
of the collective memory of the Ukrainian people and of the
Ukrainian diaspora in Canada.
Unfortunately, this great human catastrophe remains largely
unknown to most non-Ukrainians as well as to some Ukrainians.
It is necessary, therefore, to take steps to raise awareness
and to shine a light on what the Prime Minister has described
as “a dark chapter in human history”. That is why
it is so important to have a debate as we are having in the
House today, and to have the International Remembrance Flame
travelling to some 33 countries to tell the story of this tragedy
and to honour the victims.
It also was important to have the President of Ukraine visit
this House and address, not only members of the House but also
the Senate, dignitaries, diplomats and a full visitors gallery,
to speak to the facts of what occurred and to speak openly about
those facts and the prospects for Ukraine.
Standing on the steps leading to the Centre Block is something
that I will remember and count as one of the highlights of my
career as a politician. I think it is important that people
know what happened, that the tragic deaths of several million
men, women and children does not go unnoticed, and that those
deaths in Ukraine by starvation, in a nation that was the breadbasket
of Europe, needs to exposed. The facts need to be brought to
the consciousness of all communities and nations, never to be
forgotten.
I personally had the opportunity to read portions of the book
entitled, Ukraine A History, by Orest Subtelny, Third Edition,
2000. I will paraphrase portions of it to sort of bring the
reality to the ground, so to speak, of this great tragedy.
“Lacking bread”, he said, “peasants ate pets,
rats, bark, leaves”. I add here on my own that they were
relegated to do unspeakable things. He goes on to say that “the
first who died were the men, later on the children and last
of all the women, but before they died people often lost their
senses”.
He quotes from a writer, Victor Kravchenko, who makes a fair
point. He says:
On a battlefield men die quickly, they fight back, they are
sustained by fellowship and a sense of duty. Here I saw people
dying in solitude by slow degrees, dying hideously, without
the excuse of sacrifice for a cause.
The most terrifying sights were the little children with skeleton
limbs dangling from balloon-like abdomens. Starvation had wiped
every trace of youth from their faces, turning them into tortured
gargoyles; only in their eyes still lingered the reminder of
childhood
The central fact about the famine is that it did not need to
happen. Food was available. However, it was systematically confiscated.
Any man, woman or child caught taking even a handful of grain
from a government silo or a collective farm field could be,
and often was, executed. Even those already swollen from malnutrition
were not allowed to keep their grain.
As the Ukrainian Canadian Congress stated in its literature,
the region was also isolated by armed units so that people could
not exit to search for food. This at a time where, it stated,
the Soviet regime dumped 1.7 million tonnes of grain on the
western markets at the height of the Holodomor. It stated that
at the height of the Holodomor people in Ukrainian villages
were dying at the rate of 25,000 per day, 1,000 per hour, or
17 per minute. It stated that the Soviet government refused
to acknowledge to the international community the starvation
in Ukraine and turned down the assistance offered by various
countries and international relief agencies, including the International
Committee of the Red Cross. What happened was not reported appropriately,
or not reported at all, in the press. In fact, information was
suppressed.
What was done was done, so to speak, in a corner, without the
greater world and humanity's eye on it. That is why it is so
important that it be revealed to many. It was a time where millions
perished in the terrible famine orchestrated by Stalin in the
pursuit of evil ideology.
As reported by Campbell Clark, in today's Ottawa Citizen:
Mr. Yushchenko stated “In this brutal, inhumane way, the
Communist authorities were trying to deal a mortal blow to the
very foundation and heart of our nation, to the peasants and
farmers, and thus eliminate the future possibility of reviving
and growing as an independent Ukraine”.
President Yushchenko also stated in this House:
First, and probably most important, Ukraine is a country of
full democracy. The leading international organizations recognize
Ukraine as a free democratic state.
The breaking point for this was the Orange Revolution in 2004.
It witnessed the maturity of the Ukrainian nation, which in
critical times stood up for its independence and for fundamental
human rights and freedoms.
The Orange Revolution awoke our society and made irreversible
and positive changes in human minds. Ukrainians believed in
their own strengths and in their [own] ability to stand up for
their rights and for their own destiny.
In my mind, he symbolized and personified the fact that despite
the best strike of the enemy, good can, and does, prevail.
As I previously quoted from Orest Subtelny, who said, “[Ukraine
suffered] a tragedy of unfathomable proportions, it traumatized
the nation, leaving it with deep social, psychological, political,
and demographic scars that it carries to this day.”
The president bears the marks on his body at the attempt made
to strike at the very heart of his being. So does the nation
of Ukraine.
What Stalin attempted was to break the will of a people, but
could not. The nation still walks today, a free and democratic
nation, albeit bearing the scars and with a limp; however, with
a resolve and a character that has risen to the occasion. A
resolve that shoulders the responsibility for democracy and
freedom with honour and grace to ensure that the freedom endures
and that the lives lost are not lost in vain but, rather, that
those lives may be lived through the opportunity that has been
bought and paid for, for those of us who remain and those who
remain in Ukraine, so that that which was intended for evil
may be used to produce much good not only at this time but well
into the future.
May it be that not only Ukraine be inspired by bringing these
facts to light but that our nation and other nations be inspired
to stand with Ukraine, facing the reality of the past and embracing
the prospect of a future for Ukraine filled with hope, steady
progress, and where there was once lack, prosperity and overabundance.
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