atytarenko: (Canadiana)
[personal profile] atytarenko
Оттава - Сегодня, еще десять Либеральных депутатов добавили свои имена к "Заявлению Либеральных членов парламента о Канадскиом Музее Прав Человека" призывая к созданию постоянной зоны (галереи) по Голодомору в Канадском Национальном Музее Прав Человека.

Чтобы не спорить. От голода пострадали все, но особенно - те части СССР, где большинство населения составляли украинцы - Украина и Кубань. Потому искуственный голод, созданный Сталиным, и признается геноцидом украинцев. Большинство провинций Канады день памяти жертв Голодомора уже объявили днем траура.
Не мне советовать, но очень по-человечески было бы, если бы в России тоже объявили траур по погибшим от голода гражданам России, вместо того, чтобы плевать через границу на чужие могилы.

ТА ДЕ ТАМ.

Далее - оригинал заявления:
Ottawa – Today, another ten Liberal MPs added their names to “The Statement of Liberal Members of Parliament on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights” calling for the establishment of a permanent zone (gallery) on the Holodomor (Ukrainian Famine-Genocide) in Canada’s national human rights museum.

The ten new Liberal Members of Parliament are (in alphabetical order): Hon. Wayne Easter, P.C., M.P. (Malpeque), Hon. Hedy Fry, P.C., M.P. (Vancouver Centre), Andrew Kania, M.P. (Brampton West), Hon. Jim Karygiannis, P.C., M.P. (Scarborough–Agincourt), Hon. Keith Martin, P.C., M.P. (Esquimalt–Juan de Fuca), Massimo Pacetti, M.P. (Saint-Léonard–Saint-Michel), Hon. Bob Rae, P.C., M.P. (Toronto Centre), Scott Simms, M.P. (Bonavista–Gander–Grand Falls–Windsor), Alan Tonks, M.P. (York South–Weston), and Frank Valeriote, M.P. (Guelph).

This brings the total number of Liberal Members of Parliament that have publicly called for a permanent zone (exhibit) on the Holodomor in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to fifteen.


February 23, 2011
Statement of Liberal Members of Parliament on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights

The publicly funded Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) located in Winnipeg was established by Parliament through amendments to the Museums Act in 2008 and is set to open its doors in 2013.

The purpose of the CMHR is to explore the subject of human rights, with special but not exclusive reference to Canada, in order to enhance the understanding of human rights, to promote respect for others and to encourage reflection, discussion and the taking of action against hate, oppression, and crimes against humanity.

One of the fundamental and most basic of human rights is the right to nourishment—the right to food. In the case of the Holodomor, this was the first genocide that was methodically planned out and perpetrated by depriving the very people who were the producers of food, of their nourishment. What is especially horrific is that the withholding of food was used as a weapon of genocide and that it was done in a region of the world that was known as the “breadbasket of Europe.”

The Holodomor—the famine-genocide perpetrated by Soviet authorities from 1932-33 against the Ukrainian people—has been recognized as such by the Parliament of Canada, and provincial legislatures in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Alberta, Ontario, and Quebec. Canada, with a population of 1.2 million Ukrainian Canadians, was the first country to enact federal legislation to annually mark the Holodomor on the fourth Saturday of every November.

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights presents an opportunity to illustrate the promise and the importance of human rights, but sadly part of its mission will necessarily also be to educate Canadians about the consequences of denying those rights. The Holodomor is as graphic and moving an illustration as can be imagined of the denial of the basic Human Right to Food. It is a story that is well known and well understood in the Ukrainian Canadian community since there are few families in that community who were not touched in some way by this man-made catastrophe, but it is not as yet widely known or understood in the broader Canadian community. A gallery devoted to the issue of the Human Right to Food as illustrated by the experience of those who were denied this basic right through the famine-murder of the Holodomor would fit precisely within the mandate of the CMHR and would forward its important mission.

It is particularly appropriate that the CMHR, located in the city of Winnipeg with over 100,000 Ukrainian Canadian residents, in a province whose prairies were largely settled by Ukrainian farmers at a time when their Ukrainian peasant counterparts in Ukraine were being starved to death, include a permanent zone (gallery) on the Holodomor.

We federal Liberal Party Members of Parliament hold that this publicly funded national Canadian museum should create and operate a permanent gallery dedicated to the Holodomor, and that the Board of Directors of the CMHR should embrace and include respected members of the Ukrainian Canadian community with expertise in the Holodomor.

It was the Jewish-Polish scholar Raphael Lemkin, known as the “Father of The Genocide Convention” who coined the term “genocide” when referring also to the Holodomor in his 1944 book Axis Rule in Occupied Europe. Unfortunately, the full extent of this horrific “genocide by famine” of millions of Ukrainians was suppressed behind the Iron Curtain during the subsequent 58 years by the Kremlin’s communist regime.

By taking a leadership role in establishing a permanent gallery for the Holodomor, Canada would encourage post-communist countries that are now our economic and security partners to begin to more critically address the human rights violations and genocidal crimes perpetrated in the name of communism and to cease the Holodomor denials which continue to this day.

By having the Holodomor in a permanent zone (exhibit) in our national human rights museum, Canada would fulfill its traditional role in leading the world in the promotion of human rights.

Hon. Navdeep Bains, P.C., M.P. (Mississauga–Brampton South)
Bonnie Crombie, M.P. (Mississauga–Streetsville)
Hon. Wayne Easter, P.C., M.P. (Malpeque)
Hon. Hedy Fry, P.C., M.P. (Vancouver Centre)
Andrew Kania, M.P. (Brampton West)
Hon. Jim Karygiannis, P.C., M.P. (Scarborough–Agincourt)
Gerard Kennedy, M.P. (Parkdale–High Park)
Kevin Lamoureux, M.P. (Winnipeg North)
Hon. Keith Martin, P.C., M.P. (Esquimalt–Juan de Fuca)
Massimo Pacetti, M.P. (Saint-Léonard–Saint-Michel)
Hon. Bob Rae, P.C., M.P. (Toronto Centre)
Scott Simms, M.P. (Bonavista–Gander–Grand Falls–Windsor)
Alan Tonks, M.P. (York South–Weston)
Frank Valeriote, M.P. (Guelph)
Borys Wrzesnewskyj, M.P. (Etobicoke Centre)


For further information contact Borys Wrzesnewskyj, M.P.: (416) 249-7322 or (613) 947-5000


Bob Leshchyshen, MBA, CFA
Director of Corporate Development
CHF Investor Relations
Cavalcanti Hume Funfer Inc.
Toronto •New York • Calgary • São Paulo • Shanghai
Tel: (416) 868-1079 ext 223
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