The Russian Congress of Canada has issued the following appeal:
The Russian Congress of Canada appeals to the Canadian Parliament to reject Private Member’s Bill C-306, An Act to establish a Crimean Tatar Deportation (“Sürgünlik”) Memorial Day and to recognize the mass deportation of the Crimean Tatars in 1944 as an act of genocide, introduced by Mr. Kerry Diotte, MP for Edmonton-Griesbach.
In his presentation of this bill, Mr. Diotte said that he has a “clear, irrefutable evidence of a genocide, planned and executed by Stalin’s regime in 1944, one that did not truly end until the Soviet Union collapsed” and further he continues that “we know very well what is happening to Crimean Tatars today in illegally occupied Crimea at the hands of Putin”.
The deportation of Crimean Tatars by the Soviet government was inhumane indeed. However, precedents of a similar nature occurred in Canada and the USA under the war-time legislation. Canada deported ethnic Ukrainians and ethnic Germans into internment camps during World War I. During the Second World War the Canadian government forcibly relocated all Japanese in British Columbia, confiscating all their property but personal possessions. German Canadians and Japanese Canadians were also interned. According to modern research, around 40 internment camps in Canada held an estimated 30,000 to 35,000 prisoners. As recently as 1981 Solicitor General of Canada was authorized to create civilian internment camps during wartime.
While deportation of the Crimean Tatars was undoubtedly a tragedy, it falls in the same line of wartime government-sponsored abuses of ethnic minorities as the internment of Ukrainians in Canada during World War I or the American and Canadian citizens of Japanese descent during World War II. Calling it genocide is a gross misrepresentation, which diminishes and dilutes the meaning of the word, trivializes it, and therefore takes away from genuine genocidal horrors, such as the Holocaust or the decimation of the Armenian minority by the Ottoman Turks.
Genocide is defined in the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) as:
‘Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group’ (Article 2 CPPCG).
Deportation of Crimean Tatars fits this description in the same way as Canada’s treatment of Aboriginal children if one wants to capitalize on history in pursuit of specific political goals. 150 000 children First Nation, Inuit and Métis children were removed from their communities and forced to attend the Christian schools, where children were taken from their families, forbidden to speak their native languages, and subjected to physical and mental abuses. This forceful assimilation into Christian European values and culture led to the rupture of family and generational links, to the loss of Aboriginal languages and culture. Is it not a genocide, if one wanted to make a case for it? However, this politically and emotionally charged word is not used in the political discourse of the Canadian government when the issue of residential schools is discussed.
Holocaust and Armenian genocides are the two internationally recognized cases of genocide. 6 million Jews, two-thirds of all Jews who had resided in Europe, were killed by Nazis in a deliberate extermination campaign. 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed by the Ottoman authorities in 1915.
Deportation of Crimean Tatars cannot be compared to these horrible crimes, neither in intention nor in scale. According to research, from the time of deportation in May of 1944 to October 1, 1948, forty-five thousand people died in Uzbekistan and other places. This number includes not only Tatars but also Greeks, Armenians, and other nationalities. They died not in deportation, but in the post-war famine of 1946-1947, and of natural mortality, like all Soviet citizens.
Close to 200,000 Crimean Tatars were deported to Central Asia in 1944. By 1970 the number of Crimean Tatars in the USSR amounted to 833,000 people. Only 250,000 Crimean Tatars chose to return to Crimea by 1996 from their place of residence in the former USSR.
Mass involuntary resettlement of the Crimean Tatars to Central Asia in 1944 undoubtedly represented human rights violation and a form of collective punishment. At the same time, some historians claim that it helped prevent extrajudicial reprisals that soldiers of the advancing Red Army could enact toward the minority whose members actively collaborated with the Nazis. No less than 20,000 Crimean Tatars volunteered to serve in German-led military units. Many of those took part in the extermination of the civilian Russian population on the Nazi-occupied territories. According to German Field Marshall Erich von Manstein “…the majority of the Tatar population of the Crimea was very friendly to us.”
Clearly, not every Crimean Tatar was pro-Nazi. However, the Red Army could not afford to keep a largely sympathetic to the enemy population in its rear at a time when the war was still raging. Calling Crimean Tatars’ forced relocation a “genocide” is about as correct as saying that the temporary internment of the Japanese Americans and Canadians of Japanese descent was genocidal in its intent and execution.
It needs to be taken into consideration that USSR and later Russia made several important steps to recognize the fact of atrocities committed in the times of Joseph Stalin.
In 1967 the Supreme Soviet of the USSR ruled that deportation of certain individuals was unfounded, and allowed Crimean Tatars to return to the peninsula. The Soviet Union also condemned the deportation as “illegal and criminal” in 1989. In 1991, the Supreme Soviet of Russia officially established October 30th as the Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Political Repressions which includes the commemoration of nations and ethnic groups that were collectively punished by the Soviet Government for alleged collaboration with the enemy during World War II.
In 2014 the new government of Crimea started a series of commemorative events to remember the 1944 forcible deportation of Crimean Tatars that includes work on a new memorial site worth 400 million rubles (US$6 million) in total.
Incidentally, while it was Mikhail Gorbachev who initiated the process of rehabilitation for Tatars, it was Vladimir Putin who ultimately signed the decree into law in April 2014 after Crimea’s reunification with Russia. Also, Law No. 1107-1 of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic of 26 April 1991 on the rehabilitation of repressed peoples and Law No. 1761-1 of the Russian Federation of 18 October 1991 on the rehabilitation of victims of political repression were extended to the Crimean Tatars in full measure.
The Russian government along with the regional government in Crimea have been working to establish a fully-fledged national and cultural autonomy for the Crimean Tatar people. In 2014 the Crimean Parliament adopted a decree on ‘Guarantee of restoration of rights of the Crimean Tatars and their integration into the Crimean society.’
The Crimean Tatar language was recognized as a State language of the Republic of Crimea alongside Russian and Ukrainian. The Crimean Federal District authorities make arrangements each year for the Crimean Muslims to perform the hajj. It is indicative that the vast majority of the Crimean Tatars, or more than 230,000 people, chose to remain in the Russia-administered Crimea after the reunification with Russia.
The forcible deportation of Crimean Tatars was a terrible crime. It was part of a pattern of sectarian outrages committed under Stalin’s leadership. However, to try to link it to modern politics is completely disingenuous. Russia is not the USSR, just as the USSR was not Russia. Yet even the Stalinist campaign of collective punishment of the Crimean Tatars does not qualify as a campaign “to destroy, in whole or in part, an identifiable national, ethnical, racial, or religious group,” as defined in Article 2 of the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
Focusing on the protection of collective rights of the Crimean Tatars in Crimea today, we should equally encourage the Government of Ukraine to stop the war on Ukrainian citizens of ethnic Russian descent in eastern parts of the country. Only the even-handed approach to human rights abuses around the world would help us restore the Canadian moral leadership globally, as well as domestically.
For 25 years, since Ukraine became an independent state, Ukrainian authorities prevented many important problems from being solved, let alone the issue of political rehabilitation of Crimean Tatars.Ukrainian government adopted the law recognizing the deportation of Crimean Tatars as a genocide for purely political reasons. Why did not Ukraine pass such a law during 25 years, since Ukraine became an independent state? This fact clearly does not fit into an idealistic picture of the Ukrainian government, protector of rights of ethnic minorities that Ukrainian politicians promote abroad with the help of Ukrainian Diaspora. Several international organizations noted the Ukrainian state neglect of the needs of Crimean Tatars, such as the absence of a law that would settle ownership disputes between returning Tatars that claimed their property and current owners of that property, or poor housing conditions of Crimean Tatars. The absence of a clear legislation led to interethnic tensions in Crimea. The Ukrainian government did not recognize local self-governing bodies of the Crimean Tatars and did not create mechanisms which would include Tatars in the elected bodies.
What Canada should learn from tragic events like the deportation of Crimean Tatars, is the importance to remember the past and prevent similar acts of terror in the future. But we should do it by using our own history, remembering that Canada’s own First Nations were subject to genocidal policies of the government, including the use of starvation to make way for the Western expansion of European settlers. We should remember and mark the days when Germans, Austrians, Japanese, and Ukrainians were deported to the internment camps run by the Canadian government. Crimean Tatars are not part of the Canadian history.
Crimes of the Soviet past, including the deportation of Crimean Tatars, were properly assessed and condemned by both the Russian Federation and Ukraine. To draw parallels between the 1944 and 2014 and between Stalin’s Soviet Union and the modern Russian Federation is factually erroneous and politically unwarranted. Canada should not give into the lobbying efforts of moral entrepreneurs who distort the history in the name of political gains of the present. History should be a source of lessons to learn how not to repeat atrocities, not to fuel conflicts. The history of any nation, including Canada, has dark pages. We should study it carefully and objectively to understand what happened, not to ignite a new war.
To conclude, we appeal to the Canadian parliament to reject Bill C-306 for the lack of evidence of genocide intent, and treat it as an attempt of political outreach by partisan interests.
Alla Suvorova
President of the Russian Congress of Canada
Excellent petition. But since the purpose of the Bill is clearly to further the Russophobia running rampant in the West I doubt it will do any good against that.Unlike many I don’t think the election of Trump will stop that in the US. Anymore than the getting rid of Harper did in Canada.The PTB still will control both countries. And they stand committed to Russophobia. Trump “maybe” will have slowed the drive to war. But its doubtful it is stopped,only slowed.And Canada ,in the form of a “collective suicide pact” has decided to go to their destruction fully with the US. No matter how much against their peoples interest that is. That Bill,is just one more example of that. If even any more examples were needed to show their insanity.
True Bob, not stopped, only slowed. They know their behind in certain technologies and so on, so it’s time to reset and catch-up before the next round of aggression. His cabinet is absolutely scary, just another political crime family, made up of wealthy, intolerant, propagandist, war-monger, evangelical zealot, racist, torture/assassin/Israeli supporters, and right wing hucksters, who want to rule the world and turn US society back to a neo-feudal existence as they rob us of everything we have along the way. If I missed anything just fill in the blanks. It’s just horrible what’s going on and saying too much will get you in trouble. We have turned into the bad old Soviet Union and Russia has become the peaceful Democracy. Go figure.
Tatars were kicked out of Krym because they aided the Nazis – that is all one has to know about this topic. Will send a letter, though
Why did the aid the N.S Germans? Was it because they were facing oppression at the hands of the Godless Gog and Magog USSR? An enemy of my enemy is friend maybe??
No, because they are greedy and wanted the country to themselves, and they were generally anti-Russian and anti-Orthodox Christian. That’s the way Muslims and ethnic Turks are.
Maybe Russia should pass a law recognizing the stealing of First Nation children as genocide?
… which it was.
Or Roosevelt rounding up all the Japanese Americans in the 1940s. Another ‘genocide’.
“In his presentation of this bill, Mr. Diotte said that he has a “clear, irrefutable evidence of a genocide, planned and executed by Stalin’s regime in 1944”
It’s very unfortunate there isn’t a “Stalin” around now to genocide the current quisling regime in Canada.
Make that zio-quisling.
oh you are mistaken that none are around. the west should use this time of ‘the tempred putin’ to clean up their act and come to their senses. the next president will just nuke the west. all of them. pure scum and filth. of course it will be “by mistake”, ” sh!t happens” and “so sorry about the collateral damage”. ;)
I have to ask if Mr Diotte’s first name is ‘Id’ ?
Hi
Why do u label everything as Russophobia. Isn’t this hypocrisy.
The murder of a more than million Afghans is next on the list.
If other countries did similar crimes and have not yet been convicted it does not mean we should disregard such crimes in case of USSR also and label any effort to do so as Russophobia.
Russia killed jihadists who were toppling the legal government in Afghanistan. Wrong?
@Ricardo,
Sorry, there was NEVER a ‘legal’ governement or president in Afghanistan. The Soviet installed Babrak Karmal then after him another Soviet puppet, the brutal Mohammad Najibullah Ahmadza. So the Mujahedin did the right thing by fighting the despots. And by way it was the SOVIET UNION not Russia per se. Today other Afghan Mujahedin are fighting other installed puppets, this time they are US puppets. A head of state installed by foreign powers makes him/her DEFINITELY illegitimate and should be toppled and tried for high treason, and pronto.
Afghanistan was a trap for the Russians set up by the U.S. State Department and the CIA. Jimmy Carter’s National Security Adviser, admitted, in an interview with a French journalist, that the U.S. was doing everything to bait the Russians to invade. The U.S. was sponsoring terrorism. When the Russians invaded, the U.S. leadership was happy – “Now they will have their Vietnam” was the thinking of the U.S. government.
So the U.S. is at fault for setting up and wanting that war. It was their plan/plot. So the deaths go to those who wanted and took deliberate steps to cause the war.
“If other countries did similar crimes and have not yet been convicted it does not mean we should disregard such crimes in case of USSR also and label any effort to do so as Russophobia.”
Congratulations for getting it precisely all wrong here; it’s impressive in a sense.
Firstly, neither the USSR, nor Russia committed such crimes, ever. These latter are a manifestation of ‘European values’ and Russia doesn’t honour aforesaid values (on this, I wholeheartedly agree with Soros). Secondly, it is high past time that real criminals guilty of atrocious crimes for ages do get convicted; otherwise we’ll never see anything but more of the same, accompanied by non-stop anti-Russian screamfests. Thirdly, proven liars and criminals accusing Russia/USSR of crimes not committed does amount to Russophobia/anti-Sovietism.
I read they were taken out of Crimea to protect them from the vengeance of returning Russian soldiers, who’d be coming back to find their homes burned and family members killed by the Crimean Turks.
Plus, they were settled in a southern, hospitable part of the U.S.S.R. and their population thrived.
What about the U.S. and what it did to the American Indians, like the “Trail of Tears”? The American Indians were dying from the hardships.
Did Canada do similar things to the Native Americans there as the U.S. and colonists (and the respective governments) in the land which later became the U.S. did?
It doesn’t exactly take a genius to figure out what these Western philanthropists would do to the locals, were they to succeed in Crimea turning the latter into a giant NATO compound.
You should, just about, be able to work that out then.
Crimea and its people in 2014 were spared the fate of Diego Garcia in the sixties. An affront to some people obviously.
http://www.counterpunch.org/2004/10/06/stealing-diego-garcia/
@Nussiminen
Greetings, indeed, the indigenous population of Diego Garcia of is not as fortunate as the Tatars.
John Pilger made a film “Stealing A Nation” in 2004
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zhGvId4fcc
The brainless House of Saud is, as we know, fighting the US war in order to steal another strategically located Yemeni island – Socotra – in the Gulf of Aden.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/yemen-and-the-militarization-of-strategic-waterways/17460
Canada is knee deep in UkoNazis brought here after WW II as the business interests who run the country thought they would be useful as strike-breakers and bolster right-wing parties with their anti-union and ultra-conservative views. They were right on both counts.
Alberta is their stronghold, which is why (along with the “Texas North” oil culture) it is also the base of the Conservative Party of Canada. So it’s no surprise to see that the MP sponsoring the bill is from Alberta. Since they also represent a significant voting block and have political sway far beyond their numbers, somewhat like the Zionist Jews in the US, it is a foregone conclusion that not a single MP will have the spine to vote against Bill C-306, however odious it’s intentions and backers.
In the interests of disclosure I am a Muslim.
It seems that this is an attack of Russia…again. The world knew about this decades ago, why did they not act to have a memorial day then. The timing is suspect.
Yes what the Godless Gog and Magog Soviet union did was unjust and wrong to the Crimean Tatars but Russia is not responsible for that. Today’s Russia is not the Godless USSR.
If we want to go down that road, Nazi collaborating “Tatars” (Turks, Mongols, Orc´s) have, like in numerous of these places from Cyprus to “Turkey” proper to Crimea, no historic right to be there in the first place, Greeks have, they have been there since the 5th century.
Don’t worry…….the most important thing is that you surely have the right to be where you are…..all others are under big question-mark!
It would be very interesting if the Appeal would contain this information:
” In 1943, Stalin complained to Tito, that in Tehran, Roosevelt told him (Stalin) that the US can no longer continue land-lease deliveries, because the Jewish lobby is very strong in America, and is demanding the implementation of the project for the establishment of the “Crimean California”*. We (USA) are also unable to open a second front, if the decision on Crimea is not taken”, – said Mikhail Poltoranin, the Chairman of the Inter-agency Commission on the KGB Archive Research.
[Under the pressure from the Americans, On May 11, 1944, Stalin signed the order to deport Crimean Tatars to Uzbekistan.
A month later, on June 6, 1944, the Americans opened the second front!
@http://www.fort-russ.com/2015/03/how-stalin-played-americans-with.html
*The project of establishing Jewish Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in Crimea.
On April 21, 1926, a visiting session of the Bureau of the OK VKP (b) (Regional Committee of the Communist Party) in Bakhchisarai approved the prospective resettlement plan for the Republic, but it turned out that the resettlement of the Jews to Crimea was contrary to the attitudes of local authorities in respect of land provision of Tatar peasants….
(In 1927) The proposal was met with resistance from the leaders of the Crimean ASSR, primarily Veli Ibragimov. Worried by the development, Larin has sent a letter to Stalin, in which he accused Ibragimov in “igniting the dark Tatar masses”…
More details @http://www.fort-russ.com/2015/03/how-stalin-played-americans-with.html
Many thanks for this article!
It’s not in the books in Latin America.
Didn’t Scott do a piece on the real history of the deportation?
That Stalin effectively saved their skins, after they had taken the opportunity to ingratiate themselves with the nazis, in often viciously cruel ways – including burning Russians alive – while able-bodied family members were fighting at the front?
The reprisals following the victory against the nazis would likely have been ruthless.
So far from resenting Stalin, the Crimean Tatars should be grateful.
Indeed, it seems most of the Crimean Tatars are – and perfectly happy to be part of the RF again.
I suggest this Russian/ Canadian group get in touch with them and combine forces to defeat this manouvre.
Canada is Ukro-Zioinist occupied territory. Stepan Bandera Harper let them in in return for them voting for him en bloc and handing him Canada on a plate.
PM Hairdo is carrying on the proud tradition of letting Ukropians and Jews dictate Canada’s foreign policy.
If only they would start killing each other, as they are bound to do one day, it would perhaps allow Canada and Canadians to free themselves from this dual plague.
I don’t suppose it will do any good to point out 1) the ongoing error re. “six million Jews” or “extermination camps”–allies of the same Powers that want to demonize Russia must keep the “eternal Victimology” alive in order to do evil in plain sight and appear to get away with it. The bravest Jews I know oppose that victimology but are shouted down! Revisionist history must await the demise of the Anglo-Zionist power structure.