The Province

B.C. commits $100 million to address internment of Japanese Canadians

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B.C. is giving $100 million in funding to address the historical wrongs it caused when it helped to intern thousands of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War.

The announceme­nt comes on the 80th anniversar­y of the first arrivals of Japanese Canadians to the Greenwood, Kaslo, New Denver, Slocan City and Sandon internment camps in 1942.

Premier John Horgan says funds will go toward providing updated health programs for internment survivors, the creation and restoratio­n of heritage sites and updating the provincial curriculum to include what he calls a “terrible chapter” in B.C.'s history.

Horgan says the recognitio­n is “long overdue” and the funding symbolizes “turning a page” in how Japanese Canadians have been treated by past government­s.

The province says in a statement that this builds on a 2012 apology by the B.C. Legislatur­e and responds to a redress proposal advanced in 2021 by the National Associatio­n of Japanese Canadians.

B.C. also gave $2 million to the Nikkei Seniors Health Care and Housing Society last May as a first step toward fulfilling a promise to recognize the internment of almost 22,000 people.

“This endowment will not change the past, but it will ensure that generation­s that are with us still, and those that come after, will have the opportunit­y to see something positive coming out of what was clearly a very, very dark period in our collective histories,” Horgan said at a Saturday news conference.

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