Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Doc explores ‘shocking’ time in history

- ASHLEY MARTIN

On the shores of Mara Lake south of Sicamous, B.C., Andrea Malysh sheds tears at an injustice she grew up knowing nothing about.

“Why didn’t I know about it? Why wasn’t it talked about? And then actually to find out later on that it actually happened in my family? I was angry. I was really angry after all that time that this could happen in this beautiful country,” she says in Ryan Boyko’s documentar­y, That Never Happened.

Malysh’s grandparen­ts had 14 children, but not one of them had heard about Canada’s first national internment operations, which saw thousands of settlers — mostly Ukrainians — rounded up and put into camps between 1914 and 1920.

“This idea of not talking about things in families, you know, it’s that shame,” she said. “No they didn’t do anything wrong, but they felt like they did and they were treated like they had done something wrong.”

Considered “enemy aliens” under the War Measures Act, their possession­s were confiscate­d and they were forced to do manual labour.

At the Mara Lake camps, from 1915 to 1917, these prisoners built B.C.’S Highway 97.

In Jasper, internees built a road to Maligne Lake, while in Banff they built a road to Lake Louise.

There were camps across the Prairies, in Lethbridge and Munson, Brandon and Winnipeg, and one in Saskatchew­an at Eaton, where 65 prisoners worked on the railway in 1919 before being transporte­d to a Nova Scotia camp and deported.

During and after the First World War, 8,579 “enemy aliens” were interned in more than two dozen camps across Canada; about 5,000 of them were Ukrainian. But until quite recently, this wasn’t common knowledge.

The first time Boyko heard this aspect of history, he was a Grade 10 student in Saskatoon.

His dad took him to a screening of Yurij Luhovy’s 1994 documentar­y, Freedom Had A Price, at the Saskatoon Public Library.

“It was shocking to me. It was my first experience with racism toward my culture,” said Boyko.

“All my dad’s friends were doctors, lawyers, businessme­n. The premier of Saskatchew­an at the time (Roy Romanow) was a Ukrainian, so my understand­ing of what a Ukrainian man was, was very different than what I was seeing in this documentar­y.”

Boyko’s new-canadian ancestors would have been among those who were required to register as enemy aliens. When Boyko brought this informatio­n to one of his high school teachers, he got a reaction that inspired the title of his own documentar­y.

“He said that it had never happened,” said Boyko.

In the two decades since, Boyko has worked to raise awareness of the camps. He created a 33-episode web series, The Camps.

In 2017, he completed That Never Happened: Canada’s First National Internment Operations, co-written and co-produced by Diana Cofini. The film has won numerous awards and was screened at the United Nations in Geneva in September.

It currently is touring across Canada, screening this weekend in Regina, Saskatoon and Edmonton.

The documentar­y builds on Boyko’s earlier work, exploring what happened to the women and children who were left behind after the men were detained.

“There is a famous quote that says ‘those who can’t remember the past are condemned to repeat it,’ and that’s by George Santayana from 1908,” Boyko said. “And every time we were interviewi­ng people, there was some version of that mentioned.”

That Never Happened will be available for digital download Nov. 13 through itunes, Google Play, Vimeo, Bell VOD and Shaw VOD.

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