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Over half of the names could reportedly be removed from the planned memorial in Ottawa
Canadian authorities could remove more than half of the names from a planned Memorial to the Victims of Communism in Ottawa due to suspicions that many of the individuals honored could be linked to the Nazis, local media reported Monday.
According to a document obtained by the Ottawa Citizen through an information disclosure request, the Department of Canadian Heritage found that out of the 553 people and organizations originally planned to be mentioned on the monument, 50 to 60 of the names were “were likely directly linked to the Nazis.”
Furthermore, a 2023 report for Canadian Heritage insisted that over 330 names be excluded from the list “to be on the safe side,” as there was not enough information about possible links to the Nazis. It was proposed to remove other names because of there being no direct link to Canada, the outlet said.
The monument was originally scheduled to be unveiled in November 2023, but the ceremony was delayed due to concerns that some of those listed on it had collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II, as well as a scandal in which a known Ukrainian veteran of the Waffen SS, Yaroslav Hunka, received a standing ovation in the Canadian parliament.
Read moreThe latter controversy ignited a firestorm globally, particularly from the Jewish community, which pointed out that Hunka’s 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS, also known as the 1st Galician Division, which consisted mostly of Western Ukrainians, was implicated in war crimes.
In this light, the Canadian government is now “doing its due diligence to ensure all aspects of the Memorial remain compatible with Canadian values on democracy and human rights.” The monument is now scheduled to open this year, although the exact date has yet to be determined.
The planned monument first drew controversy in 2021 when the fundraising campaign attracted numerous donations meant to honor such notorious figures as Ante Pavelic, a Croatian fascist leader, and Roman Shukhevich, a Ukrainian nationalist and Nazi collaborator, who was among the perpetrators of the massacre of tens of thousands of Poles.