Category Archives: holodomor

It’s official – Ontario recognizes the Holodomor

image While we’ve been tracking its status since last year, and when it was put forth this year and passed its third reading, I forgot to post when Ontario’s Holodomor bill received it’s Royal Assent last week – making it official:

Ontario will observe Holodomor Memorial Day, after a private member’s bill originally spearheaded by Brant MPP Dave Levac received Royal Assent.

Bill 147, which Lt.-Gov. David Onley signed into law late Thursday afternoon, sets aside the fourth Saturday in November each year as the day that Ontarians commemorate victims of the Holodomor, the manmade famine of Ukraine.

"This marks an important day for Ukrainian-Canadians and especially for the family and friends who fell victim of the Holodomor," Levac said in a telephone interview after the signing.

"Through the creation of a Holodomor Memorial Day, we mend a wrong in world history and in defiance to tyranny and oppression, continue to preserve the culture, heritage and way of life of the Ukrainian people.

"Royal Assent will allow us to never forget these horrors from the past."

The Holodomor is the name given to the famine in Ukraine from 1932 to 1933, engineered by the regime of Josef Stalin to consolidate what was then a province of the Soviet Union.

About 10 million Ukrainians are thought to have perished from the regime’s policies of forced collectivization of agriculture that created mass starvation in an area that was a grain breadbasket, because nearly all production was sold abroad for cash to afford a costly industrial policy.

You can view the bill here, which is the province’s first-ever tri-sponsored private members’ bill passed by MPP’s Dave Levac of Brant, Frank Klees Newmarket-Aurora, Cheri DiNovo of Parkdale-High Park. Congratulations!

So now that’s Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, the entire country and parts of the USA – where to next? 🙂

Brant MPP hails bill’s passage

From the Brantford Expositor:

Brant MPP Dave Levac made political history with a unique tri-sponsored private member’s bill that gives official recognition to a crime against humanity in Ukraine’s past.

Lt.-Gov. David Onley is expected in the next 10 days to sign into law Bill 146, the Holodomor Memorial Day Act, which cleared third reading with unanimous support in the Ontario legislature.

With the bill’s passage, Ontario joins Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ottawa in declaring the fourth Saturday in November each year as Holodomor Memorial Day.

Congratulations!

Dalton McGuinty: Ontario needs a Holodomor bill

After last year’s attempt at recognizing the Holodomor as genocide in Ontario was shelved (ie.  politely rejected), MPP of Brantford Dave Levac re-introduced the bill last month as the Holodomor Memorial Day Act 2009. The purpose of the Bill is to make the fourth Saturday in November in each year Holodomor Memorial Day. Unfortunately the bill is receiving a similar fate as it was referred to a committee after it’s second reading so it can idle there until it expires like last year’s.

The League of Ukrainian Canadians didn’t take this lightly and sent out a note to its readers and urged them contact their Members of Provincial Parliament:

As the Holodomor has affected us all, we encourage you to write the Premier to share your support for this legislation and encourage its speedy passage. To ease this process, we have included a sample letter for you to consider, as well as some key points we encourage you to express in your communication to the Government of Ontario.

Read the entire post, including the sample letter

It’s an impressive effort, put together jointly with other MP’s Cheri DiNovo (NDP Parkdale-High Park) and Frank Klees (PC Newmarket-Aurora) and it’s definitely one I’m behind. In the past year alone we saw Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, the entire country and even the USA recognize the Holodomor as genocide.

Ukraine honours Sask. deputy premier

From the Leader-Post:

REGINA — Deputy Premier Ken Krawetz is receiving high recognition from the government of Ukraine.

The Order of King Yaroslav the Wise is being awarded to Krawetz for his efforts to help build a strong relationship with Ukraine and to raise awareness of the 75th anniversary of the Ukrainian genocide known as Holodomor, the provincial government said Wednesday in a statement congratulating Krawetz.

Krawetz introduced legislation in Saskatchewan last year to recognize those who died during the Ukrainian famine and genocide of 1932-33. The fourth Saturday in November each year now recognizes the Holodomor. Krawetz, who is also education minister, also travelled to Ukraine in the fall and renewed an education agreement between Saskatchewan and a region in the western part of the country.

Congratulations!