Windsor Star

A DAY AFTER UKRAINIAN STUDENTS VENTED THEIR ANGER AT A UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA LECTURER WHO CALLED THE HOLODOMOR FAMINE OF 1932-33 ‘A LIE,’ ALBERTA PREMIER JASON KENNEY SLAMMED THE ‘USEFUL IDIOTS’ WHO ENGAGE IN GENOCIDE DENIAL.

Professor says death of millions a Nazi ‘myth’

- STUART THOMSON

A day after Ukrainian students vented their fury at a University of Alberta lecturer who called the Holodomor famine “a lie,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney slammed the “useful idiots” who engage in genocide denial.

Dougal Macdonald, who is listed as a lecturer in the university’s education department, said on Facebook that the Holodomor was a myth perpetuate­d by the Nazis. His comments led the Ukrainian Students’ Society to call them “harmful and false beliefs” that are unacceptab­le for an employee of the university.

“Sad to see some in Canada still engaged in this genocide denial,” Kenney said on Twitter Thursday, although he didn’t mention Macdonald by name.

Kenney also posted a video of a speech he gave about Holodomor, which was a fierce condemnati­on of “Western, supposedly progressiv­e voices who were complicit in one of history’s great cover-ups.”

“These were the useful idiots of whom Lenin wrote. Westerners who purposeful­ly lied about one of the great acts of mass murder in human history,” said Kenney.

The speech was delivered last week at a Holodomor commemorat­ion in Calgary and the video was posted in full on Thursday morning as the scandal around Macdonald erupted.

Macdonald’s comments were originally reported by The Gateway, the student newspaper at the U of A, and Macdonald responded to the paper’s story with a statement decrying the “irrational assertions” and “defamation” directed at him.

The term Holodomor means “to kill by starvation” and refers to the famine in Ukraine that killed millions of people. The genocide has been recognized by the Canadian Parliament and provincial legislatur­es, including in Alberta.

In his Facebook post, which was archived online by the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, Macdonald describes the Holodomor as a myth perpetuate­d by the Nazis to discredit the Soviet Union.

“In Canada, former Nazi collaborat­ors and their spawn have long led the phony Holodomor campaign,” wrote Macdonald.

The Ukrainian Canadian Congress urged its members to contact the university and demand the dismissal of Macdonald.

“This is a stark reminder that, even in 2019, we cannot afford complacenc­y in Holodomor education and awareness,” the organizati­on’s website reads.

Macdonald was a candidate for the Marxist-leninist Party of Canada in the 2019 federal election in the Edmonton-strathcona riding, which NDP candidate Heather Mcpherson won. Macdonald tallied 77 votes. His banner photo on Facebook is an advertisem­ent to subscribe to the Marxist-leninist Party’s online bulletin and his profile picture is a photo of Fidel Castro.

His photos on Facebook are a collection of historical leftist leaders, like former Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez, Che Guevara and former North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung, who Macdonald describes as a “great leader of the Korean people.”

Although the university did not respond to a request for comment before press time, it said in a statement to the Gateway that the university is “balancing many interests and obligation­s” while it is “carefully monitoring this matter.”

The university has a commitment to freedom of expression and academic freedom for its staff, which includes “the right to comment (and) to criticize without deference to prescribed doctrine.”

In responding to the Gateway’s questions, deputy provost Wendy Rogers noted that Macdonald was making the comments as a private citizen and that they did not reflect the university’s views.

“The University of Alberta actively fosters an inclusive culture committed to the expression of, exposure to, and debate of diverse points of view,” a draft statement on freedom of expression on the school’s website reads. “Our campuses are forums for rigorous debate.”

HOLODOMOR THIS IS A STARK REMINDER THAT, EVEN IN 2019, WE CANNOT AFFORD COMPLACENC­Y IN HOLODOMOR ... AWARENESS.

 ?? DON HEALY / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? The Regina statue Bitter Memories of Childhood commemorat­es the Holodomor, which saw millions of Ukrainians starve to death in 1932 and 1933.
DON HEALY / POSTMEDIA NEWS The Regina statue Bitter Memories of Childhood commemorat­es the Holodomor, which saw millions of Ukrainians starve to death in 1932 and 1933.

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