National Internment Commemoration Day

Understanding our history and how it impacts our future has never been more important. One key event in Canadian history is the interment of enemy aliens during World War One. The Canadian First World War Internment Fund has worked with the Critical Thinking Consortium (TC2) to create free resources for teachers to help plan lessons which demonstrate how ultranationalism has been a part of Canada’s history. These resources from TC2 build on the prescribed values, knowledge, and skills within a variety of Canadian Social Studies Program of Studies. The coordinated development of this resource presents a significant case study of historical injustices perpetuated by the government of Canada in the name of national self-interest and security. This resource offers teachers the tools needed to develop critical thinking skills and the skills required to assess historical significance. Why not access this resource with stunning visual, print, online, and media resources that will engage your learners? It is time to establish a generation of learners who will prevent the occurrence of injustices within our nation.

Regarded by historians as the “first great wave of immigration” to Canada, roughly 2.5 million newcomers arrived in the new Dominion between 1896 and 1911. A significant proportion of new immigrants arriving in Canada were Ukrainians, who were actively recruited by a government in search of labour to feed its growing resource and agricultural sectors. Like other newcomers, Ukrainians faced many hardships, and struggles in what was often an unwelcoming land. The outbreak of the First World War profoundly further altered the lives of the Ukrainian migrants in ways they could not have imagined when they left their homeland in search of a better life in Canada. Having emigrated from territories under the control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Canada’s adversary during the First World War, Ukrainians and other Europeans came under increasing suspicion. As wartime anxieties fanned the flames of xenophobia, the passage of the War Measures Act on August 22, 1914 provided the legal instrument for an order-in-council by the Canadian government on October 28, 1914. This resulted in the internment of 8,579 Canadians labelled as “enemy aliens.” Over 5,000 of these people were Ukrainians. In addition, 80,000 individuals were required to register as “enemy aliens” and to report regularly to local authorities.

Internees at Castle Mountain, Banff National Park, (Source: Glenbow Museum Archives)

The affected communities include Ukrainians, Austrians, Bulgarians, Croatians, Czechs, Germans, Hungarians, Italians, Jews, Poles, Romanians, Serbians, Slovaks, Slovenes various people from the Ottoman Empire which include Alevi Kurds and Armenians, among others of which most were Ukrainian, and most were civilians. This marked the beginning of a traumatic period in Ukrainian Canadian history, one that would leave deep scars long after the last internment camp was closed.

Referred to as Canada’s First National Internment Operations, the period between 1914 and 1920 saw members of Ukrainian families separated and their property confiscated and sold. Thousands of Ukrainian men were consigned to internment camps and years of forced labour in Canada’s wilderness. Some have argued that the infrastructure development programs that received “free” Ukrainian labour benefitted the Canadian government and the captains of industry to such an extent that the internment continued for two years after the First World War had ended. Perhaps most disturbing is the fact that this episode in Canadian history has been largely overlooked by historians.

The Ukrainian Canadian Congress, National Internment Committee (NIC) is pleased to present an enclosed package of educational resources designed to assist elementary and secondary students in understanding Canada’s first national internment operations during the First World War, from 1914 to 1920.

TC2 has created FREE classroom resources to teach your students about the lesser-known WWI Internment.

For more information, please contact the Ukrainian Canadian Congress,
National Internment Committee nic@ucc.ca
For more information on the Shevchenko Foundation Canadian WWI Internment Legacy Fund, please visit https://www.internmentcanada.ca/

“This project is funded by a grant from the Shevchenko Foundation Canadian WWI Internment Legacy Fund”