The prime minister says it was a mistake that “deeply embarrassed parliament and Canada”.

  • Varyk
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    1 year ago

    And there’s still no answer as to how the heck this occurred?

    • Plantee@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/25/canadas-house-speaker-apologises-after-praising-ukrainian-veteran-who-fought-for-nazis

      Group of Nazi-Germany fighters moved to Canada after WWII, amongst them this Ukrainian who fought on the side of the Germans.

      I think this section is quite interesting and shows the reason for many Ukrainians to fight on the German side:

      Dominique Arel, the chair of Ukrainian studies at the University of Ottawa, told Canada’s public broadcaster CBC that the division Hunka was part of had attracted thousands of Ukrainian volunteers, many joining with hopes they could achieve Ukrainian independence.

      Only Germans from Germany were able to fight in the German army, Arel said, so non-German volunteers who believed in Nazi aims or sought to use Nazi power for their own ends were organised into SS divisions.

      “We have the issue of symbolism here, the optics of serving in a military unit whose logo is that of arguably the greatest criminal organisation in the 20th century … so obviously the optics are not good.”

      Not saying anything about this particular person, but the world is not black or white.

      • Varyk
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        1 year ago

        I’m sure the Nazi appreciates your sympathies, trite and irrelevant as they are.

  • fiat_lux@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    He served in the 14th Waffen-SS Grenadier Division, a voluntary unit made up mostly of ethnic Ukrainians under Nazi command.

    From the linked Wikipedia:

    The 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician) is today honored by many Ukrainian nationalists.[58] Since 2010 every year on 28 April a march is held to celebrate the foundation of the division.[59] In addition streets were named after the division in Ivano-Frankivsk (Ukrains`koi Dyvizii Street) and Ternopil (Soldiers Division “Galicia” Street).[60]

    On 23 September 2020, the Ukrainian Supreme Court ruled that symbols of SS Division Galicia do not belong to the Nazis and therefore were not banned in the country. The same argument was made by the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory, led at the time by Volodymyr Viatrovych.[61]

    None of this is a good look for either Canada or Ukraine. They were voluntary Nazis, voluntarily killing Jews, Poles, Slovakians, Yugoslavians and Soviets towards the end of the war as Hitler was getting destroyed. And as late as 2020 the Ukrainian government was giving them a huge pass. As though a Waffen-SS division supported by Himmler was… not Nazi. How on earth this MP or his staff did not do a cursory google of the guy is still beyond me.

    • Plantee@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Without knowing a great deal about this, but I think it is important to look at the reasoning behind them joining the Nazis. Ukraine wasn’t an independent state at that point. Considering Germany fought Russia, this might have had to do with self-interests in creating a state.

      Anyhow, I think things are less black and white here. Not saying that this should be applauded in anyway, though.

      • fiat_lux@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        In a speech to the soldiers of the 1st Galician division, Heinrich Himmler stated:

        “Your homeland has become so much more beautiful since you have lost – on our initiative, I must say – those residents who were so often a dirty blemish on Galicia’s good name, namely the Jews … I know that if I ordered you to liquidate the Poles … I would be giving you permission to do what you are eager to do anyway.”[43]

        The reasoning for the division’s creation sounded pretty clear and upfront. Their intentions weren’t subtle.

        The situation is not black and white, but the Nazis were not the only option available. Galicia was the site of two of the largest extermination ghettos, and the Galician unit was used to quell Slovakian resistance movements who were actually fighting for independent statehood instead of hypothetically via Nazi allegiance. It was pretty clear Germans were getting rid of the Jews and Poles. The Galicians wouldn’t have even been allowed to be a division had the Nazis been winning the war.

        Even if this guy signed up because he truly wanted his people to be independent from the Soviets and Poles and thought this was the only way to make it happen, it doesn’t explain Ukraine starting a parade in 2010 for a Waffen-SS division created by the resident German governor that surrendered to allied forces in 1945.

        I don’t give Nazis quarter, and just because Ukraine was invaded by Russia, it doesn’t mean that changes. If applauding the old guy was deeply embarassing (it was), a modern parade for a Nazi division while calling them not-Nazi should be too (it is). The Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian nationalism, and Ukrainian nationalism all can and should be condemned.

        • Plantee@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I completely agree, we should not applaud these people, not parade them and of course nationalism often leads to more harm than good.

          Of course, Himmler had his view on the group, and like you said, and is mentioned on the wikipage, many joined for other reasons, like independence. The group itself has never found guilty for war crimes, this again does not mean this hasn’t happened.

          The parade in 2010 is really… bad and strange. Makes me wonder who allowed it. This was prior to the Mayday revolution, under a Russian aligned president.

          Again, I am not saying joining the SS for other reasons than the extinction of jews is justified, but people take their opportunity when it arises in a direction they think is right.

          Thanks for the insight on the other options in the form of the Galicians. Could the reason for them (the Ukrainian section of the SS) joining the Nazis be, that they could be better equipped as a part of a war machine, rather than as a resistance group?

          • fiat_lux@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I suspect the Galicians just remembered Russian and Polish rule and decided the Nazis who were currently ruling were the better choice. Even though the Nazis would have turned on them later, Galicians were not considered Aryan.

            Himmler had his view on the group

            He had more than his view, he was instrumental in its creation and actively visited them.

            The parade in 2010 is really… bad and strange. Makes me wonder who allowed it.

            It’s an annual parade, here is 2021, first time in Kyev Although I’m not sure if it’s happened 2022 and this year.

            Again, I am not saying joining the SS for other reasons than the extinction of jews is justified, but people take their opportunity when it arises in a direction they think is right.

            I agree, but I also won’t assume good intentions in volunteering to be a Nazi soldier.

            • Plantee@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              He had more than his view, he was instrumental in its creation and actively visited them.

              Indeed, Nazi propaganda must have strengthened their alliance as well.

              President Vlodymyr Zelensky, who is Jewish, condemned the embroidery marches, which had been conducted legally.

              I guess Nazi symbolic are not as regulated as they are in western-Europe and far from the strict rules in Germany.

              Do you know if neo-nazism forms a more significant part of the Ukrainian population than in other states, or has it been much more highlighted because of the invasion?

              It is sad to see these nazi, xenophobic and extreem right parties flourishing over Europe. All the polarising issues playing now, with a large amount of disrupters and disinformation do not tend to bring people in harmony.

              • fiat_lux@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                I guess Nazi symbolic are not as regulated as they are in western-Europe and far from the strict rules in Germany.

                On 23 September 2020, the Ukrainian Supreme Court ruled that symbols of SS Division Galicia do not belong to the Nazis and therefore were not banned in the country.

                Despite being created by the Nazis as part of the Waffen-SS during a time where there were active extermination ghettos in the area it was created, despite other Ukrainians who were not Galician not being allowed to enlist in it because they weren’t Aryan enough, despite being involved with 3 massacres of Polish civilians, despite the parade clearly being about the Nazi division because they chose the date of its creation to celebrate it. I don’t even think the insignia was its own single symbol before being used for the Nazi unit.

                Do you know if neo-nazism forms a more significant part of the Ukrainian population than in other states, or has it been much more highlighted because of the invasion?

                Ukrainian history, identity and independence is… way more complex than I can possibly do justice in a comment, even if I fully understood all of the events in it. Especially Western Ukraine. The land has been invaded and reinvaded by different groups from very different ethnic backgrounds with different temporary allegiances for centuries though. The allegiance with Germany and the other Central Powers though really kicked off in after the Russian Revolution in 1917, and Ukrainian separatists signed the Brest-Litovsk Treaty which … in itself was complicated and chaotic but resulted in the Central Powers recognising Ukraine as a country and providing troops to remove the Soviet government (and citizens of Russian background) from various territories. Whether Nazi ideology it is a bigger problem in Ukraine than other countries or is just more obvious given the attention the area is currently receiving is something I cannot hope to possibly ever measure or know. All i know is that Ukraine is willing to grant special exemptions to anti-Nazi laws for one clearly very Nazi division in as late as 2020.

                • Plantee@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  Thanks for the detailed insight.

                  As a side note, I was actually going through the 1st Galician-wikipage and found a link to some explanation on the emblem. Seems there is some historical reasons for the use of the lion and the crowns. The crowns are still found in the coat of arms of Galicia.

                  This emblem was to be depicted ‘traditionally Ukrainian weapons, but those that would not be symbols of Ukrainian national hopes^1.’

                  The lion symbol in historical documents is found for the first time in the coat of arms of the Galician-Volyn state. From that time until World War I, the lion remained the Ukrainian national coat of arms in Galicia^1.

                  And the crowns has something to do with the Austrian Monarchy^1.


                  Sergey Muzychuk (2004), “Ukrainian military arm emblems during World War II 1939-45.”, https://www.myslenedrevo.com.ua/uk/Sci/AuxHistSci/Znak/znak33/UkrSymbolsWW2.html

      • Varyk
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        1 year ago

        Oh you’re not saying the voluntary Nazis should be applauded for committing genocide?

        Brave stance.