National Post

Family who employed Nazi war criminal fears nothing has changed

Canada knew his history, but it was kept secret

- Mia Rabson

• Almost 30 years ago, Gail Bocknek turned on the evening news and watched dumbfounde­d as a man who had worked for her family for decades was identified as a Nazi war criminal.

Bocknek, the daughter of European Jews who had many extended family members die in the Holocaust, felt sick.

“I was just glad that my parents didn’t live to see this,” Bocknek said.

The memories of that day resurfaced for Bocknek last fall when Canadian MPS of all stripes unknowingl­y applauded a man who had fought with a Nazi unit in Ukraine.

And they resurfaced once again this month when the Liberal government agreed to declassify 15 more pages from a 1985 report on Canada’s less-than-flattering history of allowing former Nazis into the country and failing to prosecute or deport them when their crimes came to light.

Bocknek said although decades have passed, she is not convinced anything has changed. She has little confidence that Canada’s current laws are sufficient to keep out people who committed atrocities overseas.

“I’m just saying that they’ve got to be accountabl­e and they have to protect us,” she said.

Bocknek said she was about six years old when her parents hired a housekeepe­r, Emma Tobiass, who became a fixture in their lives. Emma’s husband, Erichs Tobiass, was employed as a mechanic for a car dealership but also worked for the family regularly doing odd jobs and house sitting.

“They came and stayed with my brother and I when my parents were out of town,” she recalls.

When Bocknek married and had children of her own, Erichs and Emma Tobiass continued to work for her family as well, including looking after her children.

Bocknek said he was never a “warm man” but was also never cruel.

Then, in March 1995, Bocknek was watching a dinner hour newscast and saw a report that Canada was trying to revoke the citizenshi­ps of four men believed to have been Nazi collaborat­ors.

Bocknek heard the name Erichs Tobiass, but no photo ran with the segment.

She franticall­y called the TV station looking for more details, to no avail. At 11 p.m. they watched the news again and this time there was a photo.

“And it was Erichs,” said Bocknek.

She said the first thing she did was go out to the front of her house where some lilies Erichs had planted for them still grew. She pulled them all out and “threw them into the ravine.”

Soon after she tried to call him, looking for answers.

“He wouldn’t come to the phone,” she said.

“This lady answered, and I said, ‘I would just like you to ask Erichs one question.’ And she said, ‘what?’ And I said, ‘Would he have killed my brother and I?’ ”

All Bocknek got in response was a click as the woman hung up.

While the family had no idea about his identity, the Canadian government did — and had for nearly 30 years.

In 1966, Tobiass was on a list of six alleged war criminals from Latvia provided to the Canadian government by Simon Wiesenthal, a Holocaust survivor who dedicated his life to tracking down Nazi war criminals.

A 1995 report on Tobiass’s case said documents show Canada refused to meet with Wiesenthal about the list.

Tobiass was alleged to have been part of a Nazi commando unit with the Latvian Auxiliary Security Police, which is accused of murdering as many as 30,000 Jews between 1941 and 1943.

He moved to Canada in the 1950s and became a citizen in 1957, settling in Toronto.

Canada was among many countries that admitted thousands of Nazi war criminals in the years after the Second World War, even as many countries, including Canada, were rejecting Jewish asylum seekers.

Immigratio­n Minister Marc Miller said it is clear Canada’s history on this front is “shameful.”

“It was easier to come in as a war criminal than it was as a Jew,” he said.

Canada began taking steps to confront that history in the mid-1980s, holding a commission of inquiry known as the Deschenes Commission.

The commission identified more than 800 people possibly living in Canada with ties to the Nazis, with 29 meriting special attention by the government.

While parts of that report have been released publicly, there are still many pages that have not, including the list of names. It remains unclear exactly how many were ever investigat­ed.

The Justice Department’s war crimes unit, created after the Deschenes Commission, said in 2002 it had attempted to prosecute or deport 18 people, but only two had left the country. At least half of that number died before their cases concluded.

 ?? ARLYN MCADOREY / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gail Bocknek says her family unknowingl­y employed
an alleged Nazi war criminal for decades.
ARLYN MCADOREY / THE CANADIAN PRESS Gail Bocknek says her family unknowingl­y employed an alleged Nazi war criminal for decades.

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