Category Archives: news

Former New Jersey Devil Ken Daneyko takes to the ice in Battle of the Blades

imageCBC’s new figure skating reality show Battle of the Blades debuted tonight:

The new reality show debuted with Domi, Craig Simpson and six of their former hockey cohorts managing to avoid any ugly spills while flinging their seasoned partners across the rink, over their shoulders and between their legs in pursuit of viewer votes that could crown them coolest on ice.

The unconventional contest also cast the NHL’rs in a whole new light, with Domi sashaying in a satiny black shirt to the Rolling Stones’ "(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction" and former Canadiens player Stephane Richer offering up a stiff attempt at air guitar to Queen’s "We Will Rock You" for the classic rock-themed episode.

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While there was plenty of glitz, there were some near disasters, too, with a shaky final lift by former New Jersey Devil Ken Daneyko of Jodeyne Higgins threatening to crumble.

Daneyko hails from Edmonton and is of Ukrainian descent:

Well everybody thinks from my name I am but actually my father was born in East Germany. The name Daneyko [Da-néy-ko], as it’s pronounced in Europe, is East German, but it is probably of Eastern European descent. But, ironically, my mother is full-blood Ukrainian. So it’s not by the name. Everybody thinks that [the Ukrainian background] is from my father’s side, but it’s not my father’s side, it’s my mother’s.

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Lelek. My grandmother, who just passed away a few years ago at 93 years old, she was born in Ukraine, so I’ve had many pierogies and pyrohy. It’s probably my favorite food in the world and my mother makes pierogies as good as anybody, so anytime I go back to Edmonton, where I’m from, that’s certainly the meal I ask her for.

Good luck in the competition!

She lived through the Ukrainian famine, and never forgot what hunger felt like (obituary)

From the Globe and Mail:

Nina Dejneha led an ordinary life in Kingston, quietly cleaning hospitals. But against the great thrust of history, the very fact that she was alive was remarkable: She survived one of the most brutal periods of Stalin’s tyranny, the Great Famine of 1932-1933, as well as labour camps in Nazi Germany.

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Before she was 10 years old, Stalin began requisitioning grain and other food from the Ukrainian peasantry.

While the famine was first attributed to failed economic policies, it is now understood that Stalin’s government deliberately caused much of the suffering in part to punish Ukraine for its independent streak.

Government officials emptied peasants’ cupboards and tore up floorboards to check for hidden food.

"This was done to break the back of Ukrainian nationalism, humiliate and disable them, and to generate money, which they traded in the West for agricultural goods," said Aurel Braun, a political science professor at the University of Toronto.

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At the peak of what is now known as Soviet Ukraine’s Great Famine, or Holodomor (meaning death by starvation), it is estimated that 25,000 died each day. Some estimates place the total death toll as high as 10 million.

But Mrs. Dejneha survived, which Mr. Braun describes as "virtually miraculous."

The author neglects to mention that Canada recognizes this as an act of genocide.

In 1941, Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union, and Mrs. Dejneha was one of many Ukrainians sent to slave labour camps in Western Europe.

By the end of the war, she found herself a Soviet citizen in Germany, destined for forcible repatriation to the Soviet Union. To resist this fate, she disguised her identity by pretending to be a Ukrainian who had lived in prewar Poland.

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By 1948, Mrs. Dejneha had taken asylum in Canada as a "domestic," working in private homes in Kingston, then as a cleaner at the Hotel Dieu and Kingston General hospitals. She soon married Mike Dejneha, a cobbler who had been a supporter of the resistance against both Nazi and Soviet rule in occupied Ukraine.

The Ukrainian community in Kingston was small and tight-knit. They formed organizations, such as Kingston’s branch of what was known as the Canadian League for Ukraine’s Liberation, and the Ukrainian Canadian Club of Kingston.

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While in high school, Mr. Luciuk wrote an essay based on Mrs. Dejneha’s books and tales, and received a poor grade because the famine was not yet recognized as historical truth. She told her godson: "There’s a lot of things that aren’t in the books that haven’t been told yet. And you should always remember that. People will tell you things didn’t happen because they don’t want the world to know."

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"She is one of the last one’s in this [Ukrainian] community in Kingston, and she will be remembered by all of us who are still here," Ms. Luciuk said.

Nina Dejneha Nina Dejneha was born on May 31, 1924. She died in her home in Kingston on Sept. 20, 2009. She leaves her sister-in-law, Inna Dejneha, and Inna’s children Nadine, Natalie, Ihor and Oksana, as well as sister-in-law Anna Donowska, and her children, Victor and Rita.

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Canada launches free trade talks with Ukraine

From Alberta Farmer Express:

Canada’s farmers and farm machinery makers are among the expected beneficiaries from the launch of talks toward a free trade agreement (FTA) with Ukraine.

International Trade Minister Stockwell Day and Ukrainian Economics Minister Bohdan Danylyshyn announced the talks Tuesday, saying the two countries will meet in the coming months on "a range of trade and investment issues to facilitate economic relations and fight protectionism."

An FTA with Ukraine could further open markets for Canadian exports ranging from agricultural and seafood products to machinery and pharmaceuticals, the Canadian government said in a release. An agreement "could also help to address non-tariff barriers."

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Minister Day at the Holodomor Memorial Complex, which commemorates victims of the 1932-33 famine.  Conservative MP, James Bezan, introduced Bill C 459 last year – an Act for Canada to establish a Ukrainian Famine and Genocide Memorial Day and to recognize the Ukrainian Famine of 1932-33 as genocide.

Minister Day and Ukrainian Prime Minister, Yulia Tymoshenko, witness the signing of commercial contracts between Canada’s SNC-Lavalin/West Group Engineering and Ukraine’s UkrAgroLeasing.

Minister Day addresses a Canadian, Ukrainian and international business audience in Kiev Kyiv.

[Thanks to Nash Holos for pointing these out, photos courtesy of the Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway.]

National Capital Commission Approves Name for Ottawa Monument: "To Victims of Totalitarian Communism"

We reported earlier this week on the politically incorrectness of erecting the victims of communism memorial, but now a compromise has been made:

TORONTO, Sept. 22 /CNW/ – The National Capital Commission (NCC) approved the title "A Memorial to Victims of Totalitarian Communism – Canada, a Land of Refuge" for the monument to be built on national capital region land to the more than 100 million victims of totalitarian communism.

Tribute to Liberty, the group behind the memorial, has already added "totalitarian" to the intended wording to appease federal naysayers, but is now facing further difficulties over what NCC members allege is a "provocative" reference to communism. The NCC wants to excise any reference to a specific ideology from the memorial and dedicate it to the victims of totalitarianism in general, watering the project down into bland nothingness.

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Possibly the worst communist criminal of them all, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, left a butcher’s bill that runs into the tens of millions. His relentless paranoia fuelled repeat purges, mass starvation, ferocious internal security and gulags, which destroyed generations and fed off the minds and bodies even of those tasked with keeping the slaughterhouse running. But, today, the 20th century’s most ruthless criminal is lionized in Russia as a man who got things done, while his chief henchmen are commemorated on stamps and statues. There is even a brand of Russian cigarettes, Belomorkanal, named after a prison camp where 100,000 died.

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Why is Stephen Harper providing pay benefits to Red Army veterans?

From Borys Wrzesnewskyj’s Facebook page:

Ottawa – Members of Parliament were aghast to learn that Canadian taxpayers are funding Russian Red Army veterans’ pensions. Legislation introduced by the Harper Conservatives on June 1, 2009 — ostensibly to provide benefits for Canadian-Polish war veterans who fought so valiantly with the Allies during World War II — will also provide payments to one of the most hated and notorious armies in history.

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By the time “Uncle Joe” was done, the instruments of his oppression, the Red Army and the NKVD, had the blood of 45 million innocents on their hands. Today, Canadian veterans of the UPA (Ukrainian Insurgent Army) who fought both Nazi and Soviet evil in Europe’s bloodiest battles do not receive veterans’ benefits, yet this legislation introduced by the misguided Harper Conservatives is providing veterans’ pay to Red Army veterans — the very people they fought against.

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Most disturbingly, it appears that this was not an inadvertent oversight by the Conservative government. Red Army veterans were invited to take part in the Royal Assent of this Bill and were feted by Veterans Affairs Minister Greg Thompson and Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney. In fact, even Prime Minister Harper has gone out of his way to meet with Red Army veterans.

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