‘Nazigate’ Has Been Quickly Forgotten, But Scholars Warn Its … – The Maple
For a group of journalists and scholars, the Nazigate scandal in Parliament back in September seemed an entirely predictable outcome of a broader movement that, they argue, has distorted realities about the Holocaust for decades.
While the story has largely disappeared from international news headlines over the past month, those same journalists and scholars warn that the factors that made such a scandal possible remain deeply entrenched in the Canadian government and civil society.
In this article, we explore the history leading up to the moment when the House of Commons gave a standing ovation to Yaroslav Hunka, a Waffen SS veteran who was introduced as having fought against the Russians during the Second World War.
Some historians see public commemorations that ostensibly recognize victims of both Nazism and communism as part of the problem.
Following the Nazigate scandal, some media commentators and public officials downplayed its significance and suggested that Hunkas unit, the 14th Waffen SS Division, commonly referred to as the Galicia Division, was innocent of any war crimes.
On October 2, Politico ran an op-ed that suggested the public has been conditioned to believe that the Waffen SS primary task was committing genocide and claimed that describing every SS veteran as a criminal is an oversimplification of history. In 1946, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg declared the entire Waffen SS to be a criminal organization.
The Politico article echoed longstanding sentiments held among some nationalist Eastern European diaspora groups in Canada. To this day, monuments in Edmonton and Oakville honour veterans of the Galicia Division.
These venerations are typically justified by the fact that the veterans were nationalists who wanted to fight the Soviet Union. This narrative generally equates Nazism and communism as two equally deadly ideologies, and is reflected in Black Ribbon Day, also known as the Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism.
It is an officially recognized public commemoration in Canada, but derided by critics as a negligent act of antisemitism and historical distortion for which the Canadian government bears considerable responsibility.
Historians and scholars have argued that Black Ribbon Day is inextricably linked with a revisionist historical theory known as the Double Genocide Theory. Advocates of this theory argue that the people of Europe suffered from two genocides: The first committed by the Soviet Union and the second by Nazi Germany.
The idea asserts that the people of Eastern Europe were caught between two equally tyrannical and genocidal superpowers, and that the genocide of the Jews by the Nazis came after the Soviet Union committed a genocide against the predominantly Christian population of Western Ukraine.
Black Ribbon Day is recognized by Canada, the United States and the European Union on August 23, the day that the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany was signed in 1939, and a little more than a week before the Nazis invaded Poland, starting the Second World War.
Critics say the problem with the Double Genocide Theory is twofold. First, it insinuates that the Holocaust was predicated on an earlier Soviet-led genocide. Second, by drawing a false equivalence, it trivializes the near universally accepted importance of the Holocaust as a genocide that is generally considered to be in a category of its own.
The industrialized mass murder of Jews in Europe via slave labour and death camps came about only after nearly a decade of state-sponsored dehumanization of the Jewish people by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. This genocide built on centuries of antisemitism that had been normalized by political and religious leadership, particularly the Roman Catholic Church.
No nation acted to prevent the genocide that was clearly going to happen, not least because of pervasive antisemitism and the common association of Jews with Bolshevism. When Jews came to Canada seeking asylum in June 1939, mere months before the Nazis invaded Poland, the Mackenzie-King government turned them away.
Roughly one in four Jews murdered during the Holocaust were killed with bullets, often by neighbours, with weapons handed out to local collaborators by the Nazis as they invaded the Soviet Union beginning in the summer of 1941. This happened before the Final Solution was adopted as official Nazi policy at the Wannsee Conference of 1942.
Even before Auschwitz and Sobibor began operating as extermination camps, Hitler found willing participants to carry out his plan among local fascist collaborators that emerged from the Baltics to the Balkans and the Black Sea.
Nearly all modern, international, legal understandings of human rights are themselves a consequence of the Holocaust. The United Nations Declaration of Human Rights and all the legislation, policies, laws and related declarations that have come since stated that it was conceived because of the Holocaust.
Among mainstream professional historians, the enduring consensus is that no other genocide in human history has affected as many people, been so destructive, reached such levels of unimaginable horror, or has been as impactful, as the Holocaust. In fact, to deny or distort the reality of the Holocaust is a crime in many countries.
The idea that the Holocaust was a reaction to earlier Soviet-led crimes, a position held by some commentators such as Askold Lozynskyj, a New York attorney, president of the Ukrainian Free University Foundation, and formerly president of the Ukrainian World Congress between 1998 and 2008, is highly criticized. The theory primarily refers to the Holodomor, the mass starvation, primarily of ethnic Ukrainians, during the Soviet famines of 1931-1933.
The Holodomor is considered to be a genocide by many historians and national governments, including Canada. However, the Holodomor is not generally considered to be a genocide of equal magnitude to the Holocaust.
Further, there is a substantial scholarly debate on whether the Holodomor fits the legal definition of a genocide. Stephen G. Wheatcroft, regarded by some as the foremost international expert on Soviet agricultural policies of the interwar period, has argued that while Stalin was criminally responsible for exacerbating the crisis, brutalizing peasants, and covering up the incompetence of the state and its agricultural and economic policies, the Holomodor was fundamentally accidental. The undisputed consensus among historians is that irrespective of the specific genocide debate, the Holodomor was a crime against humanity.
The problem, according to historian Dovid Katz, with the implicit argument of Black Ribbon Day and the Double Genocide Theory that the Holocaust was predicated on the Holodomor and that they are equivalent genocides is that this is based on the antisemitic myth of Bolshevism being a Jewish conspiracy.
In an interview with The Maple, Katz explained that far-right, ultranationalist, Eastern European historical revisionists are obsessed with revising the history of the Holocaust and Second World War by way of a number of cunning ruses. He explained:
Historians, and scholars interviewed for this article including Katz, Per Anders Rudling (an expert on Ukrainian ultranationalist collaborators) all pointed out that the first stage of the Holocaust began with the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, before the Wannsee Conference of 1942 when Hitler invoked the Final Solution for the murdering of Jews in Europe.
A consistent aspect of this phase of the Holocaust was enthusiastic support for the Nazis among the nationalist elements of the remaining local populations, despite many of these having no connection to the Holodomor or the Soviet famines of 1931-1933.
Commemorating Black Ribbon Day in Canada goes back at least as far as 1986. At the time, the new policies of glasnost and perestroika were opening Soviet society to reform, but this also brought about new challenges to Soviet authority by various ethnic communities within the union and its sphere of influence.
Long unanswered or repressed historical questions began to be asked. In a nearly simultaneous mirroring of what was occurring in the Soviet Union, North Americans began to ask hard questions of their own governments, particularly on the highly controversial and emotionally charged issue of alleged war criminals from Eastern Europe who had found refuge in Canada and the United States.
However, while the Americans created the Office of Special Investigations under the Justice Department in 1979, there was far less interest in investigating similar claims of war criminals having found refuge in Canada after the war. In fact, some researchers recall rumours of former Nazis freely wandering the streets of Canadian cities.
Alvin Finkel, emeritus professor of history at Athabasca University, told The Maple of a peculiar memory from his childhood growing up in the north end of Winnipeg.
Finkel recounted that his father pointed out people on the street, claiming they had fought with the SS, or had otherwise collaborated with the Nazis. Although it didnt mean much to Finkel as a child, as an adult it sparked his curiosity.
When Finkel began investigating the matter in the 1980s, he found substantial, albeit heavily redacted, records at Library and Archives Canada, and published an article on his findings in the Journal of Canadian Studies. But the newspapers werent interested.
The Globe and Mail told me that they'd already published on this, which was a lie, said Finkel. There was a little more honesty [from the Edmonton Journal], saying that they didn't want to offend the Ukrainian community in the city.
When prime minister Brian Mulroney convened the Deschnes Commission to finally investigate the matter in 1986, the commission was hamstrung. As explained by Karyn Ball, a University of Alberta professor who specializes in historical memory and the Holocaust: They set the parameters so narrowly for their investigation of criminality [of the Waffen SS], that they basically blocked out all the crimes that were committed by Waffen SS members before they joined it.
While some collaborators on the Eastern Front joined the SS directly, others volunteered for a wide variety of other Nazi military units, including auxiliary police, some of which were later reformed as SS units. Roman Shukhevych, who had led the Nazi-allied Ukrainian Insurgent Army, had previously commanded auxiliary police units of the wartime German army.
Per Anders Rudling explained in an interview with The Maple that commemorating Black Ribbon Day also coincided with the John Demjanjuk ordeal in the United States.
Demjanjuk was a Ukrainian-American autoworker who came to international attention in the mid-1980s when he was deported to Israel to stand trial for his actions as a death camp guard during the Second World War. Rudling noted that in a 1986 edition of Ukrainian Weekly the promotion of Black Ribbon Day shares editorial space with tributes to Demjanjuk, on how to raise money for him, and even an ad on how the Ukrainian nation is on trial in Israel.
Demjanjuk was ultimately convicted in 2012 as an accessory to mass murder while he was a death camp guard at Sobibor.
Support for Demjanjuk represented part of a larger trend. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of communism in Eastern Europe ushered in a new era of nationalism, as well as new opportunities for historical revisionism. In the 30 years since, a small cadre of far-right ultranationalists with particular influence both in Eastern Europe and on the international stage, have, as Katz explained, elevated some of the most brutal and prolific collaborators and perpetrators of the Holocaust to the status of national hero on the grounds that they were anti-Soviet activists.
Shukhevych, a Ukrainian Nazi collaborator responsible for the murders of tens of thousands, and who is commemorated with a monument in Canada, is one of the better known examples of this phenomenon.
Meanwhile, the Progress Report revealed last month that the University of Albertas Canadian Institute for Ukrainian Studies (CIUS) received donations and endowments worth $1.4 million in the names of Ukrainian Nazi collaborators. David Pugliese at the Ottawa Citizen reported this week that a panel to discuss the Waffen SS was quietly cancelled at the university after professors complained that the CIUS continues to engage in whitewashing Nazi crimes.
As Canadians are now acutely aware, some suspected Eastern European collaborators found postwar refuge in Canada precisely because they were considered reliably anti-communist.
Katz and Rudling believe that there are legitimate victims of communism, and that they ought to be commemorated, as a specific day of recognition provides an opportunity to educate and discuss the nuances and details of the historical record.
But Black Ribbon Day, they said, is too sullied by deliberate efforts to obfuscate historical reality to be of any use.
It is high time for Canada and the other leading democracies to establish a day to commemorate communisms victims, said Katz. It is time to relegate Black Ribbon Day to the proverbial dustbin, and to understand that efforts to downgrade the empirical reality of the Holocausts genocide must be resisted.
Taylor C. Noakes is an independent journalist and public historian from Montreal.
With files from Alex Cosh.
Processing your application Please check your inbox and click the link to confirm your subscription. There was an error sending the email
Here is the original post:
'Nazigate' Has Been Quickly Forgotten, But Scholars Warn Its ... - The Maple
- How a Wounded Tusk Is Rehabilitating Communism - The European Conservative - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Communism Defeated Fascism Eighty Years Ago and Will Defeat it Again: The Forty-Eighth Newsletter (2025) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social... - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Transcript: Ive Got No Problem With Communism: Hasan Piker on TRIGGERnometry Podcast - The Singju Post - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- This weeks top comments from Tampabay.com include Cold-War communism and ACA benefits. - Tampa Bay Times - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump in Miami: We have a choice between Communism and Common Sense - The Pavlovic Today - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump says New Yorkers will seek refuge from communism in Miami - The Business Journals - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- In memory of the millions lost to Communism - The Institute Of Public Affairs - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- 19 People From Former Soviet Republics Are Sharing What Others "Just Don't Get" About Communism - BuzzFeed - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- 35 years later/ Why the monstrous crimes of communism in Albania were never punished - cna.al - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- The Pope gives the green light to 11 new blessed individuals killed under Nazism and Communism - Rome Reports - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Pope gives true light to the beatification of 11 martyrs of Nazism and Communism - omnesmag.com - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Are communism and socialism the same? - MinnPost - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope approves beatification for priests martyred under Nazism and Communism - Vatican News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Analyst: World Split Between Communism and FreedomUS Only Now Waking Up - NTD News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope Leo XIV authorizes beatification of 20th-century martyrs of Nazism and Communism - CatholicVote org - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Does communism have a future in India? - Scroll.in - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Trump Jr. says Mamdani victory may be needed to stop disease of communism in US - Washington Examiner - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Letter to the editor: Communism attracts followers by stoking greed - Washington Times - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Building the forces of Communism donate to the Revolutionary Communist Party today! - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 19th, 2025 [October 19th, 2025]
- From The Hindu, October 17, 1925: The war on communism - The Hindu - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Bill Maher says Trump is a success and slams young people embracing communism - Washington Examiner - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Beyond Post-Communism: Imagining the Future in Times of Transition - Universiteit Leiden - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Freshers success for the RCP: Students turn to communism for real answers - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Will Communism Win In NYC? - AM 870 The ANSWER - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Ivan Klima, author whose work depicted the tribulations of life and love under communism obituary - The Telegraph - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Americas Young Communists Really Believe True Communism Has Never Been Tried - National Review - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Soviet communism was not more successful at reducing inequality than other regimes - CEPR - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Communism surges in the US due to the brainwashing on the left [letter] - LancasterOnline - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- The New Deal and Its Clash With Communism - MSN - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Will Anarchism Face the Same Fate as Communism in Indonesia? - Magdalene.co - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Germanys forgotten sportscar was a triumph over Communism - drive.com.au - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Thirty Years After Communism: Eastern Europes EU Integration vs. the Alternative - veridica.ro - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
- Shades Of Communism: Effort To Destroy The Lives Of People For Comments About The Killing Of Charlie Kirk OpEd - Eurasia Review - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- Soviet Communism was no more successful at reducing inequality than other regimes - The London School of Economics and Political Science - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- How a Century of Anti-Communism Cleared the Way for Trumps Authoritarianism - Truthout - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Rodion Shchedrin, wide-ranging Russian composer who deftly navigated the eras of Communism and of Putin - yahoo.com - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- New Thriller Set During the Late 1980's Amongst the Fall of Communism Details the Planned Kidnapping of a Young Gifted Boy - PR Newswire - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- Berlin's memorial to victims of communism 'long overdue' - DW - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- Communism crushed cotton candy business, but family revives it in America - Illinois Policy - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- Animal Farm at 80: Why the animals really matter in Orwells parable about communism - BusinessWorld - BusinessWorld Online - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
- Under Health Communism, Care is a Human Right - In These Times - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
- MORGAN: The horrors of communism are being forgotten - Western Standard - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
- Animal Farm at 80: why the animals really matter in Orwells parable about communism - The Conversation - August 16th, 2025 [August 16th, 2025]
- Ask The Communist: Are religion and communism completely incompatible? - Revolutionary Communist Party - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
- The Winter Soldier who fled from communism will be Frankenstein - mundoamerica.com - August 12th, 2025 [August 12th, 2025]
- The Fatal Assumption at the Heart of Communism - National Catholic Register - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- Ion Iliescu, who led Romania after the fall of communism, dies at 95 - The Washington Post - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- In despair, the young are turning towards communism - The Times - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- Ion Iliescu, who led Romania after the fall of communism, dies at 95 - MSN - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- LETTER: Democrats are headed toward Communism - yoursun.com - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- The reason Leonard Bernstein was accused of communism - Far Out Magazine - August 3rd, 2025 [August 3rd, 2025]
- For an Ecommunist Alternative to Degrowth and "Luxury" Communism - Left Voice - August 1st, 2025 [August 1st, 2025]
- How Orwells 1984 helped end Communism and why its being banned in America today - Moneycontrol - July 28th, 2025 [July 28th, 2025]
- Countries where communism is banned or restricted - MSN - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- For an Eco-Communist Alternative to Degrowth and Luxury Communism - Socialist Project - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- They brought a symbol of Cold War communism to the Triangle and made it run again - Raleigh News & Observer - July 16th, 2025 [July 16th, 2025]
- Ep. 1103 New Epstein Questions About Missing Minute, and Mamdanis Communism and College Controversy - Megyn Kelly The Devil May Care - July 14th, 2025 [July 14th, 2025]
- Zohran Mamdani Has a Disgusting Personality Flaw That's Even Worse Than Loving Communism and Hamas - freebeacon.com - July 10th, 2025 [July 10th, 2025]
- Communism Meets Reincarnation? How China Is Trying To Pick The Next Dalai Lama - Worldcrunch - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- The Secret Committee That Persecuted Black and Gay People In the Name of Fighting Communism - CrimeReads - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Communism For New York Grocery Stores - AM 870 The ANSWER - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Christianity, Islam and communism and the global conquest - The Hans India - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- New York turns to full-blown Communism - Schiff Sovereign - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Trkiye's answer to Disco Elysium just broke cover, featuring more lawyers, fewer cops, an indeterminate amount of communism and twin fistfuls of guilt... - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- A Cuban woman surprises the President of Madrid in Miami: I am here because of communism. - CiberCuba - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- The essence of revolutionary communism: new introduction to the 'Classics of Marxism' - In Defence of Marxism - June 22nd, 2025 [June 22nd, 2025]
- Elicer vila and Destino exchange fire on social media: "Those of us who fled communism value the freedom of the U.S." - CiberCuba - June 22nd, 2025 [June 22nd, 2025]
- The progressive "West" and the ghost of monarchy - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- 39th Congress of the Communist Party of Sweden (SKP): Statements on Palestine and the Ukraine War - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- First Nations are mired in 'soft communism.' This leader has the fix - National Post - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Reactions by Communist Parties on Israel-Iran War - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Czech Blog: Wine and War A Glimpse Into the Legacies of Communism - Global Atlanta - June 14th, 2025 [June 14th, 2025]
- Communist Party of Israel and Hadash stand against Netanyahu government's attack on Iran - In Defense of Communism - June 14th, 2025 [June 14th, 2025]
- Anticommunism in Kyrgyzstan: The world's largest monument dedicated to Lenin to be dismantled - In Defense of Communism - June 10th, 2025 [June 10th, 2025]
- Communism Survivor on Revoking Chinese Student Visas: Beware the Enemy Within - NTD News - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- The specter of communism still looms over the Balkans - The Spectator Australia - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- Campus Communism: How the CCP Compromised Harvard and US Higher Education - Hudson Institute - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- How the Portuguese Communist Party assesses the negative electoral result of 18 May - In Defense of Communism - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- The shadow of communism still looms over the Balkans - The Spectator - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- Texas House Advances Bill Requiring Schools to Teach History and 'Atrocities' of Communism - The Texan - May 24th, 2025 [May 24th, 2025]