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This article was published 10/11/2018 (683 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

A film reminder of an often forgotten period of Canadian history gets its Manitoba debut at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights on Sunday.

That Never Happened: Canada’s First National Internment Operations, a documentary by Winnipeg-born and Saskatoon-raised director Ryan Boyko, revisits the internment of Ukrainian immigrants from 1914 to 1920. More than 8,500 people were wrongfully imprisoned and 88,000 more were forced to register with the federal government solely because they came from the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, which ruled over large parts of Eastern Europe, including Ukraine, during the First World War.

Austria-Hungary was allied with Germany and against France and Great Britain during the First World War. Canadian troops fought alongside the British and French.

Boyko and his film crew had many big obstacles in their way to telling their story. No survivors of the internment camps remain alive all these years later, and documents relating to the Ukrainian internment were destroyed by the federal government in 1954.

"It would not be possible to for us to do a first-hand experience," Boyko says in a telephone interview. "Whatever footage there is of survivors talking about it was not stuff we could necessarily get our hands on. We had to use an oral history... to try tell a complete story of what the internment operations were and why it matters today."

SUPPLIED A photo of Ukrainian internees in Brandon.

While Boyko and his crew did meet sons and daughters of internees, getting information about the camps was still no simple matter, he says.

"It was very difficult to find people, even today, to talk about it," he says. "There are people who made promises on their parents’ deathbed that they wouldn’t talk about it.

"They were afraid to talk about it. It was a secret in the family... We got a lot of pushback from certain community members... ‘Let’s just let sleeping dogs lie.’"

Boyko also faced Canada’s lack of knowledge of the internment camps, which got him inspired about the subject years ago.

"My connection really started when I was in high school. I saw a little documentary on it, and I asked my Grade 10 high school teacher if he could tell me about the Ukrainian internment in the First World War. He said, ‘You mean the Japanese internment in the Second World War?’ and I said, ‘No, the Ukrainian internment in the First World War.’

"And he looked at me and said, ‘That never happened.’ That’s really where the seed was planted."

ARMISTICE FILMS Ryan Boyko films at a monument for Ukrainian internees in Banff National Park in Alberta.

Boyko received co-operation from the federal government, however. The Conservative party was in power while he and his crew were filming, and allowed them to shoot at sites within Canada’s national parks — one of the major internment camps was in Banff National Park in Alberta — and at military installations across the country.

Then the present Liberal government gave That Never Happened its world première at the United Nations session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland, in September.

"It was received better than we could have expected," Boyko recalls. "When we do these screenings we do a question-and-answer afterwards. We did that in Geneva, but we later found out it is very rare for delegates in Geneva to actually ask questions because every question they ask and every answer given is on the record.

"For us to find out that engagement is very rare on the global level at that level of the nations, it was pretty cool."

The Ukrainians were interned because of provisions in Canada’s War Measures Act, which was enacted shortly after Canada joined the war effort in 1914. Similar laws were passed in the Second World War that led to the much wider internment of Japanese-Canadians, for which the federal government officially apologized in 1988.

"It’s essentially still on the books," Boyko says of the Emergencies Act, which replaced the War Measures Act in 1988. "It’s still something politicians need to be wary of. It is possible that legislation could be used again, so it’s important we’re telling these stories and that Canadians can understand through the lens of (the First World War), but (also) through the lens of today."

alan.small@freepress.mb.ca Twitter:@AlanDSmall