Follow the Holodomor Remembrance Flame on Google Maps!
It’s my first attempt at Google Maps, and I still have to add the international dates. Hope you like it!
Follow the Holodomor Remembrance Flame on Google Maps!
It’s my first attempt at Google Maps, and I still have to add the international dates. Hope you like it!
From the Ottawa Citizen:
Communism “still haunts the world,” and that’s why a group representing some 240 Polish-Canadian groups, as well as groups representing Canadians from 10 other ethnic backgrounds are advocating for a monument to the victims of Communism to be erected in downtown Ottawa.
The other groups represented include Latvian, Cuban,
Czech, Slovakian, Argentine, Chinese, Iranian, Korean, Ukrainian,Estonian and Canadian.“In Russia, one-third of the people believe that Stalin ‘did more good than bad for the country,’ according to a recent poll. In China, thousands of dissidents are imprisoned in the slave labour camps known as the laogai. In North Korea, masses starve as the leadership threatens to unleash nuclear war. In Cuba,
dissidents are routinely imprisoned for peacefully petitioning for democratic reform.”Mr. Lizon, who lives in Toronto, was in Ottawa yesterday for the screening of Katyn, a film about Polish officers killed by Soviet secret police during the Second World War. At the same event, an exhibit dedicated to the victims of Holodomor (the Great Famine) in Ukraine, was presented. Both events, held at the National Gallery, were organized by the Embassies of Poland and Ukraine, in collaboration with Mr. Kenney, the Canada-Poland Parliamentary Friendship Group and the Canada-Ukraine Parliamentary Friendship Group.
The United States last year erected a humble Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington DC. Estonia in 2002 released a more creative memorial:
At first one part of the body is missing, than another and another until the figure seems to totally disappear into the void. Situated in the Lesser Town under Petrin hill, the memorial is the work of a renowned Czech sculptor Olbram Zoubek and architects Jan Kerel and Zdenek Hoelzel. Unfortunately one of the statues has been destroyed during a bomb attack in 2003.
Meanwhile many former Communist countries are trying to shed their haunted past to a more democratic future.
Last summer Estonia planned to remove a tribute to Red Army soldiers who died fighting Nazy Germany. Not only did violence ensue by ethnic Russians leading to a fatal stabbing, but a vicious cyber-war which shut down much internet access in Estonia lasted for several days.
Tension also arised in Poland and Ukraine over removal of monuments and renaming of street names. But after much global embarrassment over the cyber-war, it seems Russia is going back to its old tricks of waging war through infiltrating mainstream media with propaganda such as here and here. They are now charging the changes of “Facism” and “Neo-Nationalism”. Unfortunately it’s not always confined to Russian media, this NY Times article spent most of its time arguing whether Ukrainian monuments belong in Washington, including the Taras Shevchenko monument erected by former US President
Eisenhower in 1960 (also admired by another former US President John F. Kennedy and former Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker) and upcoming Holodomor memorial also in DC.
The ball is rolling on legislation that would make the 4th Saturday in November a Holodomor Memorial Day across several provinces in Canada. Last month Ontario MPP Dave Levac introduced legislature that has already passed had its second reading. The bill is being introduced while the Holodomor Remembrance Flame is touring Canada.
After the Flame toured Saskatchewan, Party deputy premier and Education Minister Ken Krawetz on Tuesday introduced similar legislation. Premier Brad Wall (who had a tape of him surface last month mocking Ukrainians) said his government could “move quite quickly” in the fall to adopt such a bill. Krawetz was appointed to the cabinet by Wall in 2007 when the Saskatchewan Party took power.
Meanwhile in Manitoba, after the Flame toured Winnipeg Selkirk-Interlake MP James Bezan tabled a private bill for Ukrainian Famine and Genocide (Holodomor) Memorial Day which has also reached its second reading. You can watch his speech that he addressed to the House of Commons below. James Bezan is of Ukrainian descent.
Some sources are reporting that Alberta already has a Holodomor day, but I could not find any information on it. If anyone has any, please post a link in the comments!
UPDATE: Added some some more newspaper links and Google Video
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Nash Holos: British Columbia’s longest-running and only bilingual Ukrainian radio program! It airs live Sundays at 6pm on 1320AM CHMB Vancouver.
On this week’s episode:
Sylvia has easy and delicious cooking tips for beets, Myrna has gift-giving ideas for travelers to Ukraine, Fr. Edward Danylo Evanko on the Ascension, an interview on hemachromotis and the effect of iron overload on Ukrainians, proverb, community events and plenty of great Ukrainian music. CD of the Week: V-V Krayina Mriyi.
To listen, click on this mp3 or right click and ‘save target as’ to download
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ukrainian Time is a Ukrainian-language radio programme,
serving the Montreal community since 1963 and is hosted by Valentyna Golash. Material is often presented in English and French. Ukrainian Time is the media, which bonds the Ukrainian community in Montreal. The one-hour show is broadcast from Radio CFMB 1280 AM in Montreal on Saturdays at 6:00 p.m.
To listen, click on this mp3 or right click and ’save target as’ to download.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download