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Province remembers Holodomor

On November 24, MLA Ken Krawetz, Saskatchewan-Ukraine Relations Legislative Secretary, participated in a memorial candle lighting ceremony at the Saskatchewan Legislative Building to remember the millions of victims of Holodomor, a man-made famine th
Holodomor
Mary Ann Trischuk (left), president of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress – Saskatchewan, was joined by two students and MLA Ken Krawetz, Saskatchewan-Ukraine Relations Legislative Secretary in a memorial candle lighting ceremony at the Saskatchewan Legislative Building in Regina on November 24 to remember the millions of victims of Holodomor, a man-made famine that devastated Ukraine in the 1930s.

On November 24, MLA Ken Krawetz, Saskatchewan-Ukraine Relations Legislative Secretary, participated in a memorial candle lighting ceremony at the Saskatchewan Legislative Building to remember the millions of victims of Holodomor, a man-made famine that devastated Ukraine in the 1930s.

“Holodomor is an important historic event that I hope all Saskatchewan residents take a moment to reflect upon,” Krawetz said. “I also encourage everyone to visit the Bitter Memories of Childhood statue, which serves as a permanent reminder of this tragedy and can be seen on the grounds of Wascana Centre in our provincial capital. People needlessly suffered and perished in Ukraine during this terrible time in our world’s history. Let us never forget this horrific event so that it may never be repeated.”

The service occurred during National Holodomor Awareness Week, which happened in 2015 from November 23 to 29 with International Holodomor Memorial Day on November 28.

            Holodomor, which means “extermination by hunger” in Ukrainian, is regarded by historians as a deliberate campaign of terror perpetuated by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin and claimed the lives of seven to 10 million people from 1932 to 1933.

In May, an exact copy of the Bitter Memories of Childhood bronze statue by sculptor Petro Drozdowsky was dedicated in Regina and is located east of the Legislative Building along Lakeshore Drive, close to Avenue B. This project of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress – Regina Branch features a peasant girl holding a wheat sheaf and serves as a reminder of the famine’s devastation and its impact on children. The original is near the entrance of the National Holodomor Museum in Kyiv, Ukraine.

The Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan was the first jurisdiction in North America to recognize this genocide with the passing of The Ukrainian Famine and Genocide (Holodomor) Memorial Day Act in 2008.