Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide Remembrance Day Act

An Act respecting a national day of remembrance of the Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide

This bill is from the 39th Parliament, 1st session, which ended in October 2007.

Sponsor

Borys Wrzesnewskyj  Liberal

Introduced as a private member’s bill. (These don’t often become law.)

Status

Outside the Order of Precedence (a private member's bill that hasn't yet won the draw that determines which private member's bills can be debated), as of June 5, 2007
(This bill did not become law.)

Similar bills

C-459 (39th Parliament, 2nd session) Law Ukrainian Famine and Genocide Memorial Day Act
C-450 (39th Parliament, 2nd session) Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide Remembrance Day Act
C-459 (39th Parliament, 1st session) Ukrainian Famine and Genocide Memorial Day Act

Elsewhere

All sorts of information on this bill is available at LEGISinfo, an excellent resource from the Library of Parliament. You can also read the full text of the bill.

Bill numbers are reused for different bills each new session. Perhaps you were looking for one of these other C-450s:

C-450 (2019) An Act to amend the Canada Health Act
C-450 (2013) An Act to amend the Canada Elections Act (voting hours)
C-450 (2012) An Act to amend the Canada Elections Act (voting hours)
C-450 (2010) An Act to amend the Canada Post Corporation Act (rural mail delivery)
C-450 (2009) An Act to amend the Canada Post Corporation Act (rural mail delivery)

Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide Remembrance Day ActRoutine Proceedings

June 5th, 2007 / 10:05 a.m.

Liberal

Borys Wrzesnewskyj Liberal Etobicoke Centre, ON

moved for leave to introduce Bill C-450, An Act respecting a national day of remembrance of the Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide.

Mr. Speaker, it is with solemnity that I introduce my private member's bill, the Ukrainian Holodomor-Genocide Remembrance Day Act.

The purpose of the bill is to establish the fourth Saturday in November as a day of remembrance for the estimated seven million to ten million Ukrainians who died a horrifying slow death from starvation in 1932-33 during the famine masterminded, organized and carried out by the Soviet regime under Stalin.

This Holodomor-Genocide inflicted a deep and lasting scar on the Ukrainian community throughout the world. Many survivors of the famine and their descendants later immigrated to Canada. This famine was an attempt to crush the longing for freedom and to erase all aspirations for an independent Ukrainian state.

Part of the Soviet strategy also involved suppressing, distorting and wiping out all information about the Ukrainian famine, now and into the future to be known as the Holodomor-Genocide.

By enacting this legislation and recognizing a day of remembrance of this horrific tragedy, Canada will reaffirm her core values of defending human rights and condemning all injustices committed by humans against their fellow human beings, and to condemn the greatest of all evils, genocide.

(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed)