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UCCLA Media Release |
14Dec2012 | Lubomyr Luciuk
http://www.uccla.ca/media.htm
UCCLA disputes UCC
position on Canadian Museum for Human Rights
Ottawa -- For Immediate Release (14 December 2012)
Responding to a recent media release by the Ukrainian Canadian
Congress, Roman
Zakaluzny, chairman of the Ukrainian
Canadian Civil Liberties Association, a non-partisan and independent
organization dedicated to the articulation and
defence of the organized Canadian Ukrainian community's interests,
said:
"We have consistently stated that we want all
galleries in the taxpayer-funded Canadian Museum for Human Rights to be
thematic, inclusive, and comparative in content.
Most Canadians oppose elevating the suffering of any community above
all others
with a privileged or permanent space in
this national museum. We do not agree with the UCC's request for a
separate
Holodomor gallery, any more than we endorse
having an entire hall set aside for the Holocaust. Instead a "genocide
gallery" would be more educationally useful,
allowing for a treatment of how that concept came into being, when and
where it
has been applied,
and why, complemented by rotating exhibits providing visitors with a
more
complete understanding of the many different
examples of genocide that have befouled human history.
While we share the UCC's wish to see Canada's first national internment
operations covered at the CMHR, an inclusive
"War Measures Act" gallery would be more useful, covering not only
what happened to Ukrainians and other Europeans in
the First World War but the similar internal security measures taken
against
Japanese, German, Italian and Jewish
Canadians in the Second World War, and some Quebecois in 1970 -- a hall
dedicated to explaining why citizens must remain
vigilant in defence of civil liberties and human rights, particularly
in times
of domestic and international tension,
would have genuine pedagogical value.
It is imperative that the CMHR's board of directors and curators revise
their
existing plans if they wish to avoid
turning this already over-budget, behind-schedule, and very contentious
project
into an even-more divisive and fiscally
untenable one, especially given the straightened financial
circumstances facing
Canadians."
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For more information on UCCLA please go to www.uccla.ca
[W.Z. I would revise the last paragraph to read as follows:
It is imperative that the CMHR's current board of trustees and CEO resign en masse, be replaced by new personnel and
the
existing plans be revised ... to avoid turning this already over-budget, behind-schedule, and very contentious
project
into an even-more divisive and fiscally untenable one, especially given the straightened financial
circumstances facing
Canadians.]