Weren't there millions of Ukrainians who fought for the Red Army? Meanwhile, literal Nazis were committing literal genocide and literally had plans to enslave/kill/eradicate Slavs because they were seen as less human.
Yes, they absolutely did. And this group is letting current day conflicts turn them into bedfellows with those Nazis. All to defend the honour of this collaborator who they should be spitting on.
Weren't there millions of Ukrainians who fought for the Red Army?
Do you mean to imply that the Red Army didn't commit atrocities in Ukraine during WWII? A quick Wikipedia search suggests they committed war crimes too.
I'm not aware of a Soviet genocide plan for the region (at the time), but I don't think we'd want to honour vets of the Red Army in Parliament either.
No way, you mean the Red Army wasn't too happy fighting a country that literally thought Slavs were subhuman and that the only reason Slavs shouldn't all be dead is because they weren't done doing that to the Jews?
The incident drew widespread international criticism after it was revealed Hunka was a member of a mostly volunteer unit created by the Nazis to fight the Soviet Union.
Ivan Katchanovski, a Ukrainian-Canadian political science professor at the University of Ottawa, says the actions of Hunka’s Waffen-SS Galicia Division have been “whitewashed” in Canada.
In 1950, the federal cabinet decided to allow Ukrainians living in the United Kingdom to come to Canada “notwithstanding their service in the German army," as long as they went through a security screening.
In response to questions about Hunka, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress said Thursday that the people of present-day Ukraine, including its Jewish population, suffered successive occupations by “foreign empires and colonizers” going back centuries.
John-Paul Himka, a University of Alberta professor emeritus and the author of a book about Ukrainians and the Holocaust, said many of the young men who joined the Galicia division in 1943 were motivated by the atrocities they witnessed under Soviet occupation, including the murder of thousands of political prisoners and mass deportations to labour camps.
Klufas blames the branding of Hunka as a Nazi on “Russian disinformation,” adding, “the fact that he was a soldier does not mean that he was a Nazi.” He also said there was nothing wrong with Parliament applauding a man “who fought for his country.” However, he conceded that it “maybe wasn’t correct” in the circumstances, given that the people there didn’t fully understand the issue.
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