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  • The Canadian Museum For Human Rights: The `Uniqueness Of The Holocau

    THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: THE `UNIQUENESS OF THE HOLOCAUST' AND THE QUESTION OF GENOCIDE
    DIRK MOSES

    http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14623528.2012.677762?journalCode=cjgr20

    This article analyzes the debate about the controversial Canadian
    Museum for Human Rights by reconstructing the efforts to establish a
    government-sponsored Holocaust museum from the late 1990s. This history
    reveals that the controversy inheres in part in the conflation of the
    rival imperatives to promote atrocity memorialization on the one hand,
    above all of the Holocaust, and human rights education/activism on
    the other. In multicultural Canada, memory regimes, which utilize
    the egalitarian concepts of genocide or crimes against humanity to
    emphasize the suffering of all, also vie for official validation with
    the Holocaust uniqueness agenda.

    The article concludes that the museum is caught on the horns of a
    dilemma of its own making: the more it emphasizes commemoration, the
    greater the competition among migrant group leaders for exhibition
    space dedicated to 'their' experience. The more that human rights
    are emphasized, the less the interest from the private donors whose
    generosity is essential to museum's financial viability.

    Introduction On 6 December 2011, senior staff of Canadian Museum for
    Human Rights (CMHR), under construction in Winnipeg, ran its first,
    annual public meeting.

    After introductory encomia about the museum's progress, the floor
    was briefly opened to questions, revealing bitter disputes about key
    elements of the planned exhibits, as CBC News reported: ... there
    were shouts about why the museum's Examining the Holocaust gallery
    will be devoted almost entirely to the genocide of European Jews,
    while other genocides recognized by Canada will be squeezed into a
    different gallery, Breaking the Silence.

    `Is it the museum's intention to teach our children that all human
    rights flow from the Holocaust?', shouted one woman, Anne Thompson,
    from the gallery.

    The Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association (UCCLA) and
    Ukrainian Canadian Congress have previously raised concerns about the
    lack of a full exhibit to mark the Holo- domor, a genocidal famine
    that took place in Soviet-occupied Ukraine in the early 1930s.

    `How did you concretely address some of these concerns that were raised
    by the UCC, ISSN 1462-3528 print; ISSN 1469-9494 online/12/020215-24
    CD 2012 Taylor & Francis http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14623528.2012.677762

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 2 A. DIRK MOSES regarding the... possibly too much concentration
    on the Holocaust, vis-a-vis the other trage- dies of the world?',
    Ostap Hawaleshka, a Ukrainian-Canadian and retired professor asked
    museum officials at Tuesday's meeting.

    `We think that there are other tragedies... that are at least
    equivalent in terms of magni- tude to the Holocaust] but you know,
    there's nothing worse than counting my dead are more than your dead'.

    Museum CEO Stuart Murray responded by saying they are listening
    carefully to many groups and have done extensive consultation-and
    the process is still evolving.

    But 'we try to be very clear with all communities we talk to, that
    we're not a genocide museum, that we're really a human rights museum
    in the sense of how we're looking at some of these issues', he said.

    Museum spokesperson Angela Cassie added the exhibition plan has
    changed significantly in response to concerns raised by the Ukrainian
    community, as well as other genocide- affected national groups, such as
    Rwandans and Armenians.' These heated exchanges highlight the various
    points of controversy about the CMHR: the Holocaust's centrality in its
    design concept; the vehement opposition to this placement, especially
    by Ukrainian Canadians; general sensitivity about the representation
    of particular migrant group leaders' genocidal experiences; and the
    museum's attempts to acknowledge them while also insisting that its
    subject matter is human rights rather than genocide. Several background
    contexts are needed to understand this conflict.

    The first is contemporary museum praxis. Over the last twenty years or
    so, museums have tried to forge new relationships with their publics
    by problematiz- ing issues and encouraging visitor reflection, rather
    than by conveying high culture to the passive masses: 'exhibition
    as process rather than product', like the Explor- atorium in San
    Francisco, for example.

    2 At the same time, other more political museum agendas have come to
    the fore: a commemorative one that memorializes atrocities, and an
    activist concern with combating racism and other sorts of preju- dice.

    3 These are not easily commensurable agendas, but examples of their
    success- ful reconciliation can be found in the Caen-Normandy Memorial
    for History and Peace, and the Simon Wiesenthal Museum of Tolerance
    in Los Angeles.

    4 Mention of the Museum of Tolerance points to a second context:
    the prevalence of linking the Holocaust to human rights and genocide
    awareness: for example, in the European Union Agency for Fundamental
    Rights report on Holocaust and Human Rights Education; the Committee
    on Conscience of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM);
    the Task Force for International Cooperation on Holocaust Education,
    Remembrance, and Research; Anne Frank House's work on discrimination;
    and the move to integrate 'other genocides' into Great Britain's
    Holocaust Memorial Day. In all these cases, the attempt is made to
    elicit universal lessons from the particular events that have been
    called, retrospectively, the Holocaust.

    The proponents of this 'lessons of the Holocaust' approach would
    likely sub- scribe to Holocaust's uniqueness. The heated debate
    about this contention since the 1980s is another important context
    of the Canadian dispute. Its latest iteration centers on east-central
    Europe-and especially in Lithuania-in the form of the 216

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 3 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS `double-genocide thesis'
    which posits that the Soviet and Nazi regimes committed genocides of
    equal gravity against the Baltic, Slavic and Jewish inhabitants of
    what Timothy Snyder calls the `bloodlands' .

    5 Thus in 2008 mainly central and eastern European states signed
    the 'Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism'
    to highlight the crimes of the Soviet regimes, and soon after the
    European Parliament inaugurated 23 August as the 'European Day of
    Remem- brance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism' .

    6 As might be expected, this memory competition in Europe occurs
    wherever the affected Europeans have settled. So yet another context
    is the struggle for recog- nition among immigrant community leaders
    in multicultural Canada, an identity politics that threatens the
    reconciliation of competing museum agendas mentioned above.' These
    leaders tend to invest 'their' groups with ontological status, so
    that they, and not individuals, are the significant bearers of human
    rights and memory.

    The liberal agenda of individual human rights is thus undercut by such
    communi- tarian assumptions, particularly when collective traumas that
    occurred outside Canada are competitively invoked. The widespread use
    of the genocide concept indicates the `groupness' of traumatic injury
    and its memory: the suffering of `the Jews' and 'the Ukrainians',
    for instance. Their experiences are not adequately captured by the
    largely individualistic human rights terminology. In a democratic
    system where political leaders can highlight these experiences
    to court particular electoral constituencies, this struggle for
    recognition is laden with irresistible pol- itical temptations,
    especially in the contemporary global environment in which genocidal
    intentions against Israel are ascribed to Iran; remembering the Holo-
    caust thereby becomes enlisted into the 'war on terror', for example.

    Finally, an important context pertains to Indigenous Canadians. They
    have been conspicuously absent from the debate, perhaps because
    attention has been focused on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
    that has been investigating the fate of Indigenous children in
    residential schools, or because the museum includes a dedicated
    gallery to Indigenous experiences. At the same time, critics have
    raised questions about the incomplete archaeological survey of the
    museum site, which contains Indigenous heritage.

    This article focuses on the first two contexts; I address the others
    in another publication.

    8 Here I highlight how the controversy about a human rights museum
    in Canada since the late 1990s demonstrates the difficulty of
    combining atrocity memorialization on the one hand, and human
    rights education/activism on the other, in an entrenched culture
    of identity politics. The CMHR became a lightning rode for such
    claim-making by attempting to operationalize the new par- ticipatory
    museum pedagogy: as an 'ideas museum' rather than display of arti-
    facts, it invited Canadians in 2009 to contribute their experiences
    of human rights-usually stories of their violation-for inclusion
    in the planned exhibitions, thereby creating a commemorative
    expectation. Overwhelmingly, the stories of suffering revealed
    that their victimization related to their group membership-
    as Indigenous people, Chinese or Ukrainian immigrants in Canada,
    or Jews, Ukrainians, Armenians and Rwandan abroad-for which they
    often invoked the genocide concept. What is more, this expectation
    has been intensely experienced 217

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 4 A. DIRK MOSES and publicly expressed by migrant community
    leaders in heated debates about a government-sponsored Holocaust or
    genocide museum since the 1990s.

    Not surprisingly, this conjuncture set in motion a general political
    dynamic: the attempt to institutionalize a particular memory regime
    entailed seeking the support of governments that in turn need to
    appease important electoral constituencies. All the while, the ability
    of museum supporters to raise private monies depends on their ability
    to deliver the promised memory regime, making the memory wars about
    more than symbolic capital alone: actual capital is involved.

    The attempt to place the Holocaust-as a unique event of
    world-historical significance-at the CMHR's center was initially
    successful. In multicultural Canada, however, a rival memory regime,
    which utilizes the concepts of genocide and crimes against humanity to
    emphasize the equal suffering of all, vies for official vali- dation.

    What follows is a dense narrative reconstruction that begins with
    efforts to found an official Holocaust exhibition/museum in some form
    in the late 1990s.

    It will show that until 2003 governments avoided publicly validating
    any particu- lar memory regime. Subsequent partiality by Ottawa then
    opened a Pandora's box of irreconcilable traumatic memory competition
    between those who postulated the Holocaust's uniqueness and those
    who rejected it. Because no history of the debate about the CMHR has
    been written, the purpose of this article is also to provide the first
    account and analysis of its development, although it is necessarily a
    prelimi- nary undertaking based on publicly available sources. In time,
    hopefully, histor- ians will be able to draw on currently unavailable
    documentation produced by the museum and government agencies.

    Before the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, 1998-2003 The initial
    debate about Holocaust memorialization in Canada warrants detailed
    attention, because it shows the essential continuities between the
    arguments for and against it since the later 1990s. A significant
    flashpoint was the controversy about a proposed Holocaust gallery
    in the Canadian War Museum. In early 1998, a subcommittee of the
    Canadian Senate heard representatives of various ethnic communities
    make respective submissions. Jewish groups argued that such a gallery
    was consistent with the museum's mission, indeed that it demon- strated
    the moral stakes of the Second World War. As a 'free-standing permanent
    structure' to symbolize 'the nation's commitment to memorializing
    the horrors of the Holocaust for generations to come', as the
    Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) and B'nai Brith expressed their bid,
    the g,allery would fulfill their desire for a gov- ernment-sponsored
    Holocaust museum.

    Opposing them were, among others, Ukrainian Canadian leaders, whose
    sub- mission pleaded for a separate genocide museum, and argued
    that any Holocaust exhibit should include all victims of Nazism,
    not just Jews."

    ) Veterans' groups adamantly opposed the gallery, angered that they
    had not been sufficiently con- sulted about possible inclusion. The
    Chairman of the National Council of Veteran Associations, Cliff
    Chadderton, suggested that, in any event, other 218

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 5 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS genocides would need to be
    included in such a gallery. The country's most promi- nent Holocaust
    historian, Michael Marrus, likewise had reservations about a Holo-
    caust gallery, although he thought a Holocaust museum should be
    built in 'the national interest'. The subcommittee's report, Guarding
    history, approvingly recorded Man - us as advising that such a venture
    'should not be a project which pits groups of Canadians against each
    other' .

    11 In the end, noting 'the many sensitive and complex aspects of the
    possible con- struction of a Holocaust Gallery', the subcommittee
    reached a compromise that represented a setback for the CJC and B'nai
    Brith: their gallery proposal was rejected even if the principle of
    a 'free standing [Holocaust] gallery' in another context remained
    intact. The subcommittee's subsequent recommendation was cal- culated
    to keep the social peace by offering all sides some hope. For what it
    gave with one hand-'a national Holocaust Gallery that will serve and
    educate Cana- dians for years to come'-it took away with the other
    in its twelfth recommen- dation: 'that the Government undertake a
    meaningful and thorough study as to the feasibility of a national
    holocaust and/or other acts of genocide gallery' .

    12 Defeated but undeterred, Jewish groups read the recommendations
    as a Balfour-Declaration-like commitment to a Holocaust museum,
    in part because the museum's accompanying press release stated that
    the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation would 'assist in the
    exploration of an alternative site for the eventual development of
    a stand-alone and independent Holocaust Museum'. Quoting this press
    release in 2000, Eric Vernon, Director of Govern- ment Relations at the
    CJC, insisted that 'there is a commitment on the table to establish
    a stand-alone Holocaust museum, which we now prefer to refer to as
    a Holocaust and human rights museum'.

    13 So far as I can tell, this is the first mention of a Holocaust
    and human rights museum.

    Jewish leaders had prevailed in the face of opposition before and were
    confident that they could prosecute their case successfully. For
    example, in 1995, Sarkis Assadourian, a Syrian-born member of
    parliament of Armenian descent, proposed making 20-27 April an official
    week to remember crimes against humanity, coinciding with 27 April,
    Holocaust Memorial Day (`Yom Hashoah'). His inten- tion was plain;
    he wanted 'members of the House to view the Holocaust and gen- ocide
    as more than crimes against one group, but to see them as crimes
    against humanity'.

    14 In the event, Assadourian failed. All ten Canadian provinces recog-
    nized Holocaust Memorial Day, followed by the national government
    in 2003.

    The successful Holocaust Memorial Day campaign was led by Moshe
    Ronen, President of the CJC, who in early 1999 accompanied Canadian
    Prime Minister Jean Chretien on an official visit to Auschwitz. His
    Holocaust survivor father, Mordechai, and Jack Silverstone, the CJC's
    Executive Vice-President and General Counsel, also travelled with them.

    15 This visit sparked a new chapter in the Canadian memory wars,
    because the Prime Minister declined to consult with other victims
    of Nazism in Canada, especially those of Polish background, who
    felt affronted that the Nazis' mass killing of their compatriots
    during World War II was not honored. Soon after the trip, Jewish
    groups claimed that the prime minister had verbally promised them a
    Holocaust museum, a claim 219

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 6 A. DIRK MOSES Chretien denied.

    16 The CJC felt the national government should now honor its per-
    ceived commitment.

    Accurately sensing that a Holocaust museum was still on the agenda,
    Assadour- ian applied public pressure on the prime minister while he
    was still in Europe by urging the government to establish a museum
    for all victims of mass violence.

    `You can't say one group of victims is more worthy than another',
    he declared.

    17 He then submitted a private members bill for an exhibition on
    crimes against humanity in the Canadian Museum of Civilization as
    soon as Chretrien returned in February 1999. The Ukrainian Canadian
    Congress (UCC) immediately sup- ported the bill, just as it had used
    Chretien's visit to Europe, which included Ukraine, to advocate a
    'federally funded Genocide Museum in Ottawa'.

    It was hard for the UCC to complain of bias when the prime minister
    had participated in a wreath-laying ceremony at the national memorial
    for the Holodomor-the famine-genocide of 1932-1933-while in Kiev.'
    8 The Canadian Ethnocultural Council and the new Canadians for a
    Genocide Museum-a coalition of many immigrant communities led by
    John Gregorovich of the UCC and founded in November 1998 after the
    Guarding history recommendation-backed it as wel1.

    19 The CJC declined to join the coalition. Manuel Prutschi, its
    National Direc- tor of Community Relations, explained that 'our clear
    impression was that this was an effort to dilute the national Holocaust
    museum project, so we didn't see any way to be productively involved' .

    20 As might be expected, Ronen rejected Assadourian's bill, which he
    tried to out- flank by proposing two museums: We want a genocide museum
    but we recognize that the Jewish community wants a Holocaust museum,
    and that it's appropriate for them to lobby for it... The Jewish
    community feels it's such a special case that it shouldn't be included
    with other genocides, as it would detract from [the Holocaust].

    21 The Canadian Jewish News reported him as suggesting that 'lobbying
    for a gen- ocide museum was being orchestrated by individuals who
    cannot tolerate the notion that the Holocaust was a form of genocide
    unlike any other, and that it is unique in history in "terms of the
    size and scope of its murderous agenda"' .

    22 Other Jewish leaders criticized Assadourian in the same way:
    'not only does Assa- dourian oppose the construction of a Holocaust
    museum', said Amos Sochac- zevksi, National Chair of the B'nai Brith
    Canada's Institute for International Affairs, 'he also opposes the
    construction of any museum on intolerance that would place emphasis
    on the Holocaust as a unique event in history' .

    23 Sol Littman, Canada's representative at the Simon Wiesenthal
    Center for Holocaust Studies, accused Gregorovich of 'issue envy'
    and of trying to portray Ukrainians as 'victims' .

    24 In March 2000, Ronen called on Minister for Canadian Heritage,
    Sheila Copps, 'to allocate an existing site to house a museum on the
    Holocaust and human rights, to be established in partnership with the
    Canadian Jewish com- munity and Canadians of good will from across
    the country' .

    25 Employing a different strategy, B'nai Brith was willing to entertain
    Assadour- ian's bill so long as the Holocaust stood at its core. The
    alternative, said its 220

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    Page 7 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS president Ruth Klein, was
    'a scramble, almost like a competition for minorities to have their
    particular historical pain recorded'.

    26 Klein's was a prescient obser- vation, as the debate about
    Assadourian's private member's bill revealed. She would have likely
    rejected the proposition that the bone of contention was the attempt
    to have the government recognize the Holocaust as unique; or have pre-
    dicted that Jewish communities leaders would participate in such a
    scramble as avidly as other migrant group community leaders.

    The Canadian parliament's Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage
    invited community and museum representatives to speak to Assadourian's
    bill in mid- 2000. He introduced the discussion by reminding all that
    he did not propose a gen- ocide exhibit, because that would exclude
    victims of other sorts of mass crimes, `like the Chinese, with 35
    million slaughtered'. His preferred concept was the more inclusive
    crimes against humanity. Giving prominence to the suffering of one
    group entailed excluding that of another, which was discriminatory and,
    he added, repeated the racist logic of the genocide.

    27 James Kafieh, a Palestinian- Canadian lawyer of Canadians for a
    Genocide Museum, followed with a lengthy submission. While welcoming
    the bill's emphasis on 'equity and inclusiveness', he did not think
    it went far enough, as it did not form the basis of an education cam-
    paign. Consciousness of genocide was lacking in Canadian schools,
    'except for perhaps one case of genocide, where material has been
    proliferated widely', namely the Holocaust. It was particularly
    important to increase 'knowledge and awareness of genocide' and
    'the forgotten victims-the Gypsies, the Ukrainians, the Cambodians'
    so that Canadians can 'become more supportive in the effort to put
    an end to these atrocities'.

    28 Like Assadourian's bill, these pedagogical notions struck at the
    heart of the Jewish groups' agenda to have schools teach the Holocaust
    as the lesson about the Second World War, genocide and human rights.

    Nate Leipicer, chair of the CJC's Holocaust Remembrance Committee,
    responded by first noting the great strides in Holocaust
    memorialization made elsewhere in the world: the new Holocaust
    exhibit in London's Imperial War Museum and the International
    Forum on the Holocaust in Stockholm whose charter was signed by
    Canada. International government and academic recog- nition of
    the Holocaust underwrote its special status, he said: 'It was the
    opinion of a large majority of those who attended [Stockholm], and
    substantiated by historians and social scientists, that the Holocaust
    is unique'.

    Leipicer set out the reasons for this claim in detail, though trying
    to avoid giving offence to others: `All genocide, all human tragic
    events, are of equal importance.

    There's no ques- tion about that. We do not want to get into a
    contest on whose tragedy was larger or who suffered more. This does
    not lead us anywhere'. As so often happens in these debates, this
    type of statement was immediately qualified: 'However, the Holocaust
    encompasses all genocide and all mass murders, wherever they happen
    and whenever they occur'. On this basis, the CJC proposed 'a Holocaust
    and human rights museum that would focus on the Holocaust as such
    and would also include the question of human rights'. This was still
    an inclusive agenda, he insisted, mentioning the other victims of
    Nazism. Holocaust education entailed talking 'about all atrocities
    that were perpetrated against other people'.

    29 221

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 8 A. DIRK MOSES Leipicer's message was underlined by Sheldon
    Howard, Director of Govern- ment Relations at B'nai Brith, Canada. The
    Holocaust would be a 'central theme' and 'springboard, if you like, for
    a discussion about genocide, about crimes against humanity, and about
    the horrors of this century'. He too empha- sized education. Justifying
    the Holocaust's centrality was easy: 'The answer is so that crimes
    against humanity witnessed in the past 100 years, the pinnacle of
    which was the Holocaust, will never, ever happen again'. While it was
    important to be inclusive 'to reflect the spirit of our multicultural
    Canadian identity', the museum's depiction of history also must be
    'exacting', by which he meant that the Holocaust 'was unique': it was
    'not just another example of state-sponsored killing in the twentieth
    century'. This was a fact, he continued, 'that must be hon- oured,
    honoured without in any way detracting from the other genocides perpe-
    trated in the twentieth century'. The Holocaust, he thought, could
    be a 'central reference point' without 'undermining the experience
    of other ethnic groups', because its lessons were 'universal' and
    invited comparisons with other cases, thereby drawing them into the
    social field of vision.

    30 Howard outlined three rationales for a Holocaust and human rights
    museum. As nothing said by CMHR representatives and supporters in
    2010 and 2011 was not already expressed by the CJC in 2000 for this
    first iteration of a Holocaust and human rights museum, they warrant
    reproduction here.

    First, the Holocaust is the most completely documented genocide of
    the century, so from a practical perspective, the foundations exist
    to support the study of other atrocities. Second, the lessons of
    the Holocaust are particularly pertinent here in Canada since we
    live in a western, industrialized democracy that shares many of
    the cultural traditions and values of pre-war Germany. Third, the
    Holocaust experience illustrates the step-by-step map that leads to
    genocide: from pervasive social bias to legalized exclusion; from
    state-sanctioned removal of rights to brutal dehumanization; from
    ethnic cleansing to, finally, the systematic, industrialized mass
    murder of the 'final solution' as an open and protected government
    policy.

    31 The only difference between the CMHR's rhetoric and this list is
    that human rights substitute for genocide, although a few lines later
    Howard added that 'the Holo- caust contains all the elements of human
    rights abuse'.

    As might be expected, speakers from other groups focused on their
    own experi- ences and challenged the Jewish representatives'
    case. Ukrainian, Arab and Rwandan representatives made the now
    familiar pitch for an 'equitable' and `inclusive' genocide museum
    while pointing out the special, even 'unique' dimen- sions of their
    own experiences. Another turn of phrase would recur a decade later.

    Marsha Skypuch from the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association
    (UCCLA), like Kafieh, stressed the ignorance about genocide among
    Canadian school children, and added 'I want them to think of themselves
    as Canadians and to think that everyone is equal, not that anyone is
    more equal than someone else' .

    32 The standing committee met again five days later to continue
    deliberations, this time inviting officials from the Canadian Museum
    of Civilization Corporation.

    222

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 9 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS John English and Victor
    Rabinovich were models of tact, gently reminding ethnic community
    leaders that the private memorialization of their tragedies should
    be regarded as adequate while also empathizing with their suffering:
    'in a society as complex as our own', said the latter, 'memory is
    not necessarily something that is state sanctioned or government
    sanctioned'. What Rabinovich meant by `complex' was indicated
    by the multiple references to 'social cohesion' in the two men's
    presentations. So when pressed by Assadourian whether the museum would
    sponsor a Holocaust museum, Rabinovich assured him that it would not.

    Making plain the government line, he added that 'All of us have terrors
    in our past, whether as communities or as individual. Focusing history
    only on terrors is not a constructive way of moving forward' .

    33 In light of the two hearings, the standing committee reached the
    same decision as the Canadian War Museum: a strategic deferral of the
    question. The only con- sensus it could discern among the quarreling
    community representatives was to establish a separate museum that
    focused on research, education and memory.

    But whose model would prevail? The 'Canadian way of reaching
    consensus', reported the committee, emphasized 'tolerance and
    reconciliation', which entailed avoiding 'disagreement over the form
    and content of a traditional museum'.

    Accordingly, it recommended that academic centers conduct research on
    'all gen- ocides and crimes against humanity'.

    34 No-one's memory would be officially con- secrated-at least for now.

    Defeated yet again, Jewish community leaders kept up their contact with
    high level government figures. Writing in December 2001, Dr. Israel
    Unger and Eleanor Getzler, co-chairs of the CJC's National Holocaust
    Remembrance Com- mittee, were frustrated by the lack of progress. 'Six
    months have now elapsed since your frank and open dinner meeting
    with leaders of the Jewish community of Canada', they wrote to the
    Minister of Canadian Heritage, at which you out- lined your vision
    of how the Museum should unfold'. Invoking the terror attack in
    New York and World Conference Against Racism in Durban a few months
    earlier, they submitted that 'now, perhaps more than ever, we need
    to establish an edu- cational and research facility in the nation's
    capital dedicated to promoting human rights and Canadian values of
    respect for diversity and equality while sen- sitizing visitors about
    the dangers of extreme racism and hate that are the lessons of the
    Holocaust, the supreme manifestation of race hate and genocide'.

    35 After 9/ 11, geopolitics and the evocation of a 'new antisemitism'
    featured in the electoral calculus of the museum's pitch.

    36 The Museum is conceived, 2003-2009 In the event, it was the Asper
    Foundation, led by media tycoon, Israel Asper, which achieved the
    breakthrough. Set up in 1982, the foundation is a philanthropic
    organization that in 1997 commenced a 'Human Rights and Holocaust
    Studies Program' in Winnipeg, his home town. Among other elements,
    the program entails the expensive and logistically complex exercise
    of taking students to the USHMM in Washington, DC.

    37 Why not have a similar institution in Canada, 223

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 10 A. DIRK MOSES the Asper family asked after a visit there
    in 2000?

    38 Asper, a senior figure in the Manitoba Liberal Party scene as well
    as a prominent businessman, understood that, after two parliamentary
    committees on the subject, the government was uninterested in a
    stand-alone Holocaust or genocide museum because it threatened the
    official commitment to social cohesion. During 2000 and 2001, he
    investigated the feasibility of a Canadian Museum for Human Rights in
    Winnipeg, and sought the support of local and regional politicians. In
    November 2001, he wrote to Chretien-they knew one another from Liberal
    Party politics-and to all levels of government with a three-volume
    feasibility study for a human rights and Holo- caust museum in the vein
    of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles.

    39 His supporters think he approached government after realizing that
    private funding would be inadequate.

    4 Already before the November 2001 submission, Chretien had been
    attracted by the proposal's link to the Canadian Charter of Rights
    and Freedoms that he had championed, as well as the private- public
    partnership funding model: while government would contribute funds,
    Asper would raise private monies and contribute the balance himself.

    Chretien agreed to fund 100 million Canadian dollars although no
    written agreement to this effect was signed:" Negotiations dragged
    on during 2002 as different levels of government weighed up the
    opportunity cost of such an investment; federal monies for this
    project would mean essential infrastructure could not be funded. In
    April 2003, the Min- ister of Canadian Heritage agreed to contribute
    as a way to stimulate private fun- draising that in turn might induce
    further government backing.

    42 This tentative support suggested that the communal differences
    about such a museum might have been resolved to the government's
    satisfaction.

    43 Unlike in previous proposals by Jewish community leaders based
    in Ottowa, the Asper Foundation's executive director, Moe Levy,
    assured all that the venture was a 'museum for human rights,
    not the Holocaust'. Asper also insisted that 'This museum will be
    totally apolitical and antiseptic in terms of trying to preach a
    message of one kind of inhumanity over another'!" Significantly,
    there was no opposition from the UCC, which purports to represent a
    significant electoral con- stituency of over one million Canadians
    who can claim some Ukrainian descent (more than three times as
    many as Jewish Canadians), hundreds of thousands of whom live in
    Manitoba. Levy promised the UCC in letter of 11 April 2003 that
    the Asper Foundation proposal was for 'an all-inclusive Canadian
    genocide museum', invoking that term much-used by non-Jewish groups
    during the parlia- mentary committee debates of 2000. Indeed, the
    proposed museum would house exhibits on many human rights abuses,
    including those perpetrated by Canadian governments. The letter
    continued in the manner of previous proposals: 'As you are aware, the
    CMHR goes well beyond a genocide museum. The CMHR's objec- tive is to
    recognize and celebrate human rights as the foundation for human equal-
    ity, dignity and freedom'. The sweetener was the promise that the
    'Ukrainian Famine/Genocide' would feature 'very clearly, distinctly,
    and permanently', as would the internment of Ukrainians in World War
    One. In return, Levy requested a letter of support to include in the
    media package.

    45 Indeed, the UCC was grateful 224

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    Page 11 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS that the Ukrainian story
    would be told here. 'The museum will be the first place in the world
    where the famine will be given attention', said the UCC's executive
    director, Ostap Skrypnyk.

    46 The UCC was enamoured of the projected museum's genocide memorial
    function rather than solely its human rights agenda, as was the
    Armenian community affiliated Zoryan Institute after a meeting with
    Gail Asper at the same time. The Armenian-Canadian leadership was
    trying to reach a compromise between the Holocaust and genocide
    rivalry and thought the Asper approach provided the answer.

    47 This Jewish-Ukrainian unanimity was remarkable in view of
    the acrimony between the communities during the 1980s and 1990s
    regarding the war crimes prosecution campaign against some Ukrainian
    immigrants-above all the mainly Ukrainian-manned Waffen-SS Division
    `Galicia'-for collaborating with Nazis in World War II and the
    Holocaust. The UCC and UCCLA felt that Ukrai- nian-Canadians were
    being unfairly singled out by the government's Commis- sion of Inquiry
    on War Criminals, established in 1985, especially in view of the fact
    that communists responsible for Holodomor and other crimes, who might
    also be in Canada, were not pursued. Ukrainian-Canadian leaders also
    thought that Jewish leaders, who had pushed for the prosecutions,
    were not sufficiently anti-communist, as they needed to rely on the
    Soviet Union to furnish evidence for the war crimes cases. In fact, the
    UCCLA was founded in the mid-1980s because its members felt that the
    UCC was not campaigning effectively against the war crimes allegations.

    48 In this vein, it declined to follow the UCC's endorse- ment of the
    project, instead advocating the position of the Canadians for a Geno-
    cide Museum coalition-its spokesman, after all, was John Gregorovich,
    then the UCCLA president-namely equal treatment for all genocides,
    which meant no special treatment for the Holodomor either.

    49 The UCCLA's consistent view that the Asper plan was a Holocaust
    museum in disguise was borne out by Jewish groups leaders'
    expectations. They certainv did not interpret the new museum in the
    terms that Levy set out in his letter to the UCC. Its attraction was
    the Holocaust commemoration focus. It was no secret that the Asper
    family wanted 'to create a Canadian setting to explain the Holo-
    caust' .

    5° The Asper Foundation press announcement of the project also made
    plain the Holocaust's centrality. A Holocaust gallery would be one
    of the perma- nent ones; at this point, there was no mention of a
    gallery for other genocides or crimes against humanity. As if to head
    off the anticipated objections to the Holo- caust gallery, the museum
    project's announcement presented a detailed case for the Holocaust's
    uniqueness in the same terms as the parliamentary committee heard
    three years earlier, although without relating it to human rights.

    You may ask why there is a focus on the Holocaust in the Consequences
    Gallery. The Holo- caust represents a singular, unprecedented event
    in human history.

    Though other systematic mass murders of specific groups in the
    multi-millions represented great evil, many scholars around the
    world are of the opinion that the Holocaust is unique in its breadth
    and depth. It is the first and only time in history that an entire
    people across the planet (referred to by the Nazis as 'world Jewry')
    were openly targeted for annihilation for the sole purpose of their
    religion by a democratically elected modern government of one of the
    most advanced, 225

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    Page 12 A. DIRK MOSES cultured, and intellectual countries in the
    world. Almost two thirds of European Jewry, one third of world Jewry,
    were murdered because of government-sanctioned prejudice based on
    ignorance, fear and misunderstanding. European Jewish civilization was
    effectively wiped off the face of the planet. Another unique aspect
    of the Holocaust is the fact that the Nazis were able to implement
    their 'Final Solution' by maintaining the racist ideology that the
    elimination of world Jewry (also referred to by the Nazis as 'the
    destructive race') would benefit Germany and the world when in fact
    the Jews were no threat.

    Finally, the uniqueness of the Holocaust prompted the coining of the
    word 'genocide' by Rafael Lempkin [sic] in his 1944 book Axis Rule
    in Occupied Europe.

    51 An Asper Foundation press release a month later mentioned its
    commitment to create a major human rights museum that will also
    'incorporate the largest Holo- caust gallery in Canada'.

    52 The continuity of this framing is apparent. In 2005, Kim Jasper, a
    spokeswoman for Friends of the Canadian Human Rights Museum, was quoted
    as saying that 'the Holocaust will be a key part of the project' .

    53 And in 2008, Gail Asper-who led the foundation after Israel
    Aspers' death in 2003-praised the fact that the CMHR 'will contain
    the first national gallery in Canada dealing with the Holocaust. This
    is something that is long overdue for Canada. It's highly appropriate
    that the gallery dealing with the Holocaust and anti-Semitism today
    be in the museum for human rights'.

    54 The battle over the Holocaust's uniqueness, with the familiar
    arguments from the earlier parliamentary committee debates, continued
    in the press in 2003 and 2004. Barney Sneiderman, a law professor
    at the University of Manitoba in Win- nipeg, reminded readers of
    the Winnipeg Free Press that the 'Holocaust is unique in a way',
    after Lubomyr Luciuk had contested Moe Levy's statement that 'the
    Holocaust stands out as a unique event in history'.

    55 Luciuk, the son of Ukrainian political refugees, director of
    research for the UCCLA, and a much-published pol- itical geography
    academic at the Royal Military College of Canada, responded with an
    article in The Ukrainian Weekly called 'All genocide victims must be
    hal- lowed'.

    56 Referring to the guarantee of Gail Asper of '100% satisfaction'
    with the museum, Luciuk wrote it could only mean that 'many millions
    of Ukraine's victims are not marginalized, somehow made less worthy
    of memory than the Holocaust's victims. The Holodomor was arguably the
    greatest act of genocide in 20th century Europe. Recognizing that would
    not only ensure that the proposed Canadian Museum for Human Rights is a
    unique institution, it would make it a truly world class one as well' .

    57 This debate may have been largely academic because, by the end of
    2003, Asper had died and Chretien left office, leaving the museum's
    fate in the hands of his Liberal Party successors. The project
    languished until a change of govern- ment in 2005 and election campaign
    in the next year during which the Conservative Party leader Stephen
    Harper agreed to make it a national priority.

    58 Not surprisingly, the Aspers' family-owned newspaper, the National
    Post, run by Israel's son David, also stood behind it; the paper
    supported Harper during the election campaign. Harper was also
    adamantly pro-Israel, and he was rewarded for both positions with
    the CJC' s 'Saul Hayes Human Rights Award' in 2009.

    59 226

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    Page 13 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS These links between
    the CMHR, Holocaust commemoration, combating global antisemitism and
    anti-Zionism featured in parliamentary debate that year. While Irwin
    Cotler, Chief Counsel to the CJC during the divisive war crimes
    investi- gations in 1986, raised the spectre of Iran's threat to
    Israel, Brian Jean entreated the CMHR's role to 'allow people to learn
    about the values of democracy, freedom, human rights and the rule of
    law, and indeed to remember such atrocities [like the Holocaust]' .

    6° Anita Neville, representing Winnipeg South Centre, reminded the
    house about the Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Anti-
    semitism established earlier that year to confront antisemitism in
    the guise of anti- Zionism, before turning to what she saw as the
    CMHR's essential purpose, namely Holocaust memorialization.

    However, the important issue is that the genesis of the Canadian
    Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg was that it would be a Holocaust
    museum. There was much discussion over it and much input from a whole
    host of communities as to whether it should be a Holocaust museum or
    indeed a museum of human rights, as it is now established.

    It is equally important that there be a permanent Holocaust gallery
    in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. It was the vision of the
    late Israel Asper in promoting this museum. It was the basis upon
    which many private sector donors made their contributions to 4.

    61 Neville understood the fund-raising logic of the Holocaust
    commemoration focus. The financial dimension was also an inducement for
    the Winnipeg business community, as it promised to bring much-needed
    investment and jobs to the depressed inner city. Consistently
    supportive was the Winnipeg Free Press, whose owners, Ronald Stern and
    Bob Silver, donated between CAD$500,000 and CAD$999,999 to the CMHR.

    62 Leo Ledohowski, the Ukrainian-Canadian owner of a large hotel
    chain and supporter of Holodomor memory, gave between one and two
    millions dollars, perhaps in keeping with Moe Levy's encouragement
    to ethnic communities to tell their stories and raise money so they
    could participate in the museum's orientation. 'We believe the people
    who pay should have a say in how it is run', he said in 2003.

    63 In August 2008, the Museums Act was amended to make the CMHR the
    coun- try's fifth national museum and the first outside Ottawa. Stuart
    Murray, a Manito- ban Conservative Party leader, was appointed its
    director a year later. Now the federal government would run the museum,
    but its 'say in how it is run' was unclear in the transitional year
    before Murray took control. In the meantime, a Ministerial Advisory
    Committee consulted focus groups for a report about the museum's
    possible content. The Holocaust received a low 7 per cent support,
    ranking below First Nations, genocide, women, internments, and war
    and conflict, an outcome that mollified Luciuk at the time.

    64 This ranking was inconsistent with the political and fund-raising
    imperatives that had hitherto informed the museum's plans.

    After construction commenced in April 2009, near the junction of the
    Red and Assiniboine Rivers, the historic center of Winnipeg known as
    'the Forks', the museum's staff conducted new meetings with citizens
    across the country to 227

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    Page 14 A. DIRK MOSES ascertain their human rights experiences. The
    results were collected with com- mentary and recommendations by a
    Contents Advisory Committee led by Asper confidant, the lawyer Yude
    Henteleff, also a member of the advisory board of the B'nai Brith
    National Task Force Leadership whose executive director is Ruth Klein.

    65 The Contents Advisory Committee Final Report was released on 25
    May 2010.

    66 It signaled a new phase in the museum wars.

    The Contents Advisory Committee Report and its aftermath, 2009-2011
    The report's controversial recommendation was to effectively up-end the
    ranking of the 2008 Ministerial Advisory Committee by now featuring the
    Holocaust in the museum's central gallery, a decision that journalist
    Ira Basen regarded as all too `predictable' in his much-cited article
    on the CMHR.

    67 The impression of partial- ity was hardly dispelled by the
    report's transparent reasoning, for, without explicit justification,
    it adopted the perspective of Holocaust survivors rather than those of
    other trauma victims, whose testimony it chose to exclude. Moreover,
    the reason- ing repeated the now well-known arguments used a decade
    before in the parlia- mentary committee hearings, plus the new
    post-9/11 concern with the so-called new antisemitism: Those who
    advocated that the Museum should recognize the centrality of the
    Holocaust emphasized that it is the Holocaust that provides our
    paradigm for understanding the causes and processes of all mass,
    state-sponsored violence, as well as provides the inspiration for
    human rights protection on a world-wide scale. As such, it merits
    a permanent home and a major focus within the Museum. With such
    an essential foundation secured, the Museum can and should explore
    relationships between other genocides and the Nazi atrocities: for
    example, how the Nazis learned from the earlier genocide in Armenia.

    At the Vancouver bilateral meetings, we were exhorted to use the
    experience of the Nazi Holocaust as a lens through which to view all
    genocides... Indeed, many of those who attended the sessions across
    Canada spoke not only of the Holocaust but also of the resurgence of
    anti-Semitic views and behaviour.

    68 That the Holocaust would always constitute the museum's heart seems
    likely considering that the architectural designs had been delegated to
    Ralph Applebaum Associates, a New York firm that designed the USHMM,
    in 2005 and completed already in late March 2007, at which stage
    the Holocaust gallery was allocated `approximately 4,500 sq. ft.,
    a significant part of the 47,000 sq.

    ft. of exhibit space' .

    69 In other words, the Contents Advisory Committee Report seems to
    have been tailored to match the architectural concept and designs that
    were decided long before the public consultation. What changed is its
    public rationale after the museum became a federal crown corporation
    in 2008; the explicit appeals to Holocaust uniqueness were dropped
    and the link to human rights asserted.

    The CMHR was now proposing twelve galleries. After the
    introductory gallery, a substantial one was to be devoted to First
    Nations-Indigenous peoples, highlight- ing their survival and culture
    as well as suffered wrongs. The next was the largest, the Holocaust
    gallery. Then followed a smaller one on 'mass atrocities' in which
    the Holodomor, internment of Ukrainians in World War One, and other
    events in 228

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    Page 15 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS twentieth-century Canadian
    and global history were each granted a little space.

    The remaining galleries were devoted to human rights issues and
    activism. In effect, the idea floated by the CJC and B'nai Brith
    in 2000 that two museums be constructed-one for the Holocaust and
    another for genocide-was incorpor- ated within the new CMHR, the
    'mass atrocity' gallery representing other geno- cides and crimes
    against humanity.

    As might be expected, the UCC now felt that the deal sealed in
    2003 had been broken, while the UCCLA was disma,yed that the 2008
    MinisteriaUAdvisory Com- mittee report had beeen superseded.'" Being
    'lumped' in the mass atrocity gallery was considered particularly
    objectionable. The Ukrainian-Canadian leaders spent the rest of
    2010 and 2011 mounting an unremitting campaign against the Advisory
    Committee's report. It took various forms: lobbying the museum,
    lobbying poli- ticians and pressing their case in the media. They
    were not alone.

    Tony Bergrneier, National President of the German -Canadian Congress,
    said 'We shouldn't have a Holocaust exhibit as a permanent exhibit if
    no one else has one', but on the whole it was the Ukrainian community
    leaders who drove the campaign. Voices from First Nations, African and
    Asian migrant communities were conspicuously absent.' I Some of the
    demands varied, as before. The UCC wanted a Holodomor gallery that
    bore comparison with the Holocaust one, while the UCCLA advocated
    twelve galleries that are 'thematic, comparative and inclusive',
    in which no genocide pre- dominated; where the UCC wanted to elevate
    the Holodomor to the Holocaust's lofty status, the UCCLA wanted to
    bring the Holocaust down to the same level.

    Both agreed that Gail Asper and her foundation should not be associated
    with the museum-she still chaired the Friends of the CMHR-and that
    the museum's leadership should be changed to reflect the demographic
    diversity of the country. Tactics have included organizing their
    own poll which showed that the Holocaust was not a popular priority,
    and a postcard campaign featuring a cartoon from the 1947 Ukrainian
    edition of George Orwell's novel Animal Farm, with a whip-bearing
    pig overlain with the quotation that 'All animals are equal but some
    animals are more equal than others', as well as `All galleries are
    equal but some are more equal than others', evoking Marsha Skypuch's
    remark to the parliamentary committee in 2000.

    72 Not surprisingly, the postcard provoked accusations of
    antisemitism. The UCCLA denied that the card painted Jews as
    (communist) pigs although it is not hard to understand why it would
    be interpreted in this way.

    Luciuk could invoke the authority of Michael Marrus who criticized the
    CMHR in an interview in April 2011. Marrus thought that the community
    consultation had predictably resulted in the public preoccupation
    with the museum's memorializa- tion function as immigrant communities
    sought to have their experiences rep- resented, thereby pitting them
    against one another, as he had warned in 1998.

    He also disputed the museum's claim that the Holocaust animated the
    postwar human rights movement. 'Unfortunately, there is very little
    evidence for this con- tention. To the contrary, in the immediate
    postwar period there still does not seem to have been a very clear
    sense about the nature of the Holocaust, and it takes until 229

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    Page 16 A. DIRK MOSES the 1960s or 1970s for this to really gel. I
    think the prominence given to the Holo- caust, however well meaning,
    is historically incorrect' .

    74 Marrus was consulted by the museum but ignored.

    Predictably, he was dismissed by Dan Lett in the Winnipeg Free Press.

    The author of many articles defending the CMHR, Lett reminded readers
    that an open letter of 91 academics had attacked the UCC/UCCLA campaign
    for inflating the death toll of the Holodomor so it exceeded the
    Holocaust, and for failing to mention that Ukrainian nationalists
    had collaborated with the Nazis in the Holo- caust.

    75 But Marrus was not alone. Roger W. Smith and George Shirinian, both
    of the Armenian-Canadian community-affiliated International Institute
    for Geno- cide Studies, wrote separate pieces urging genocide as
    the master concept of the CHMR because it was a de facto genocide
    museum irrespective of official insis- tence that it was really a
    human rights museum.

    76 Like Paul Grod of the UCC, Shirinian argued that each unique
    experience of genocide would be distorted if fil- tered through
    the Holocaust lens. The latter did not in fact encompass all other
    genocides, as so often asserted by Jewish leaders, they said.

    77 The campaign began to bite by early 2011. One by one,
    parliamentarians, especially those of Ukrainian background or with many
    Ukrainian-Canadian con- stituents, publicly criticized the prominence
    of the museum's Holocaust gallery and pleaded for the Holodomor'
    s equal status.

    78 In March, the museum board invited Lindy Ledohowski, a literature
    scholar of Ukrainian descent, to join it, much to the UCC' s pleasure.

    79 The museum also began to backpedal on its claim that the Holocaust
    had given birth the human rights movement.

    Now it stressed that Nazi Germany represented the ultimate assault on
    human rights, and that the Holocaust gallery would include non-Jewish
    victims of the Holocaust.

    Finally, the museum's spokesperson, Angela Cassie, began to stress
    that the Con- tents Advisory Committee Report represented only interim
    advice and that the museum's contents were still under review.

    80 At the same time, proponents of the museum's Holocaust-centrism
    continued to advance the older arguments. The Winnipeg Free Press
    thought the Holocaust should take the 'front seat' in any human rights
    museum because it had inspired postwar human rights, an argument
    made by the same newspaper earlier when it observed that 'The museum
    is not saying that individual Jews suffered more than Ukrainians,
    but it is saying that some crimes are more revealing and conse-
    quential than others' .

    81 The claim to uniqueness continued to be an article of faith for
    academics like Arthur Schafer, who insisted that the Holocaust be
    given `primacy of commemoration because of the ideology that was
    behind the murder of the Jews' ; 82 and to Catherine Chatterley of
    the new Canadian Institute for the Study of Antisemitism, who argued
    that the Holocaust is 'unique because its antecedents are two thousand
    years old and yet still persist today. One cannot say that about the
    ideologies at work in other genocides' .

    83 An online petition of the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg to support
    the Holocaust gallery stated that 'the Holocaust is unfortunately
    the ultimate prototype for the study of human rights violations'
    but that it 'in no way detracts from the histories of other human
    rights violations. In fact, the opposite will be the case; to learn
    about the Holocaust 230

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    Page 17 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS will allow one to acquire
    greater insight into other human rights violations' .

    84 They could not understand the UCC/UCCLA objections as other than
    ignorarxe, bad faith or antisemitism.

    The fear that the Holocaust gallery would be somehow diluted or
    abandoned was most acutely expressed by Rhona Spivak, editor of the
    Winnipeg Jewish Review. In an 'Open Letter to Lubomyr Luciuk' in March
    2011, she rejected his polling ploy, arguing that, as a tiny minority,
    Jews would always be unpopular with the non-Jewish majority. The
    gallery decision should instead be made by `scholars of genocide',
    who she thought would agree that the Holocaust's unique- ness was an
    unassailable fact. Again, the evidence on the public record suggests
    that the Jewish community's interest in the CHMR was driven by the
    commem- orative uniqueness agenda.

    At the very beginning of this project, even before it ever became a
    government funded museum (remember that time Mr. Luciuk?), it was held
    out to the Jewish community that there would be a permanent gallery
    dedicated to the Holocaust in the CMHR. If you and your supporters
    have your way, that will not be the case. Clearly, there is no point
    in waiting to speak out, or holding back. We as a community are going
    to feel extremely resent- ful if efforts to eliminate a permanent
    Holocaust Gallery are successful.

    85 If Luciuk thought the Asper Foundation broke its deal with the UCC,
    Spivak was arguing that the Jewish community's deal was being broken
    as well.

    Its expec- tation, as the critics had suspected all along, was that
    the CMHR would be the vehicle for the Holocaust museum for which
    Jewish leaders had been striving since the 1990s. Yude Henteleff's
    address to the University of Manitoba in January 2012 likewise
    expressed alarm at the prospect of the Holocaust's decen- tering:
    'If this [`position of the Holocaust separate zone'] is in any way
    diminished it will significantly impair the museum in carrying out
    its stated objectives as noted in its enabling legislation'. To ensure
    that 'this diminshment [sic] will not occur', he urged the museum to
    appoint a permanent 'recognized international scholar with respect
    to the Holocaust', becuause 'ad hoc consultations even with experts
    in the field falls far short of the necessity of such a staff person' .

    86 In the event, Jewish journalists were quickly reassured about the
    size and per- manence of the Holocaust gallery when they expressed
    concern in late 2010.

    87 A year later, they seemed less sanguine because of the continuous
    changes underway in exhibition planning. Antisemitism, for one, seemed
    underplayed for the tastes Jewish Post and News's editor, Bernie
    Bellan, who also noted the steady dimin- ution of the Holocaust's
    dedicated gallery space since Asper's original 2003 concept. He
    attributed the introduction of the Armenian genocide and Holodomor
    into its space as contextual background-though he doubted whether
    the Holodo- mor was really a genocide-to the CMHR's need to find
    'a compromise approach' with the Ukrainian lobby.

    88 To be sure, the tone has changed. The public campaign against the
    Contents Advisory Committee Report seems to have taken its toll on
    the nerves of senior management, who also receive advice about best
    practice from the museum's pro- fessional researcher-curators. External
    peer review by scholars like the historian 231

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    Page 18 A. DIRK MOSES Doris Bergen and sociologist Chris Powell
    also led to a recasting of the Holocaust and mass atrocity
    galleries in 2011. Whereas the Holocaust was once said to be `the
    heart of the museum', its `center-piece', 'conceptual core' and
    'emotional anchor'-the hitherto successful pitch to donors about its
    uniqueness-now the planned gallery space is beginning to downplay its
    memorialization function by instead highlighting three aspects that
    intersect with human rights issues: the cor- ruption of state power,
    the spreading of fear and hatred, and war.

    Acknowledging that Nazi persecutions cannot be captured by the human
    rights concept alone, an exhibit on Raphael Lemkin, the originator
    of the genocide concept, is also envi- saged.

    The mass atrocities gallery will now be called 'breaking the
    silence'. Its purpose is, again, to downplay the commemorative
    dimension of the selected events by highlighting issues such as
    resistance and responses to gross human rights violations, for
    instance, breaking the silence about them.

    Some of them are genocides, like the five formally recognized
    by Canada's parliament: Armenia, Holodomor, Holocaust, Rwanda and
    Srebrenica. Some are not genocide, like Taliban restrictions on women
    in Afghanistan. Moreover, material on Canadian Indigenous peoples
    will now feature in all eleven galleries in addition to the gallery
    devoted to Indigenous rights. The more the design process becomes
    integrated into academic protocols, the more it tends in the direction
    of a human rights museum, and the less the political imperative from
    above to commemorate the Holocaust as unique can impose itself.

    s9 Conclusion There are limits to this professionalization, however,
    because the existence of a Holocaust gallery cannot be expunged for
    political and financial reasons, even though its justification is
    hardly convincing. Consider the strained reasoning of the museum's head
    Stuart Murray at a university event about the CMHR in Sep- tember 2011.

    So if you look at the role of the Holocaust in the museum, as one
    important example, com- memorating the suffering of the victims isn't
    going to be the aim.

    But, examining how a modern, advanced, democratic society could
    so quickly and vio- lently collapse into genocide? Well, there's
    an exceedingly relevant lesson there. In the same way, there are
    lessons to be learned from other past abuses that our visitors will
    find inside the walls of the museum.

    But comparing the suffering of one individual over another? Not here.

    Not ever. That's never been our game. And if we need to be clearer
    on that, then so we will. There's no ques- tion that I've heard
    concern, as one somewhat prominent example, from the Ukrainian-
    Canadian community.

    9° Having abandoned two previous justifications for the Holocaust's
    centrality- namely that its horror led to the United Nations Universal
    Declaration on Human Rights and the Genocide Convention in 1948; and
    that it is the best documented and/or most commemorated genocide,
    i.e., the only one of world historical sig- nificance-the CMHR now
    presents the Holocaust as the archetypal collapse of 232

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    Page 19 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS democracy into genocide
    from which human rights lessons can be drawn.

    But why this archetype? Most societies where gross human rights
    abuses have occurred in the twentieth century were not democracies
    that collapsed. Why not take as a model the Great Leap Forward in
    China in which so many millions starved or were killed?' Moreover,
    in Murray's words, genocide is (again) commingled with human rights,
    reintroducing the atrocity memorialization question through the back
    door. By offering the Holocaust as the prototypical human rights viola-
    tion, coupled with a separate gallery for other genocides and gross
    human rights violations, a human rights museum perforce becomes,
    at least in part, a genocide memorial whether it intends to or not.

    Moreover, as presented here, Elie Wiesel's formulation of universal and
    essen- tially Jewish character of the Holocaust, designed to address
    why others should learn about the Holocaust, is transformed into a
    phenomenological stance that the Holocaust provides the archetype
    for understanding all other genocides or human rights abuses. Yet
    the ways in which the Holocaust is phenomenologically distinct make
    it a poor archetype for understanding other genocides.

    92 That is why to claim that singling out the Holocaust or the
    Nazi regime as somehow paradig- matic does not implicitly compare
    suffering is difficult to square with metaphors and judgments used
    by museum supporters like 'front seat' and more `consequen- tial';
    by implication, others must occupy the back seat and are less
    consequential.

    Whatever its amendments, the museum is still not studying and
    presenting geno- cides comparatively, as Armenian-Canadian groups have
    consistently advocated, which is why the International Institute for
    Genocide and Human Rights Issues continues to criticize it, despite
    the inclusion of the Armenian genocide in the breaking the silence
    gallery. 'It seems that the CHMR is playing community poli- tics by
    contacting different groups at different times, while ignoring the
    challen- ging questions raised by an institute whose mission is the
    study of these very issue' .

    93 In view of Canada's migrant demographic and multicultural policy
    consensus, the museum's current architecture cannot be better designed
    to pit groups against one another, thereby ignoring Marrus's warning
    in 1998. The tension between commemoration and human rights education
    outlined at the beginning of this article are irresolvable, despite
    the best efforts of the museum researcher - curators, so long as
    the museum's management insists on its politically and finan- cially
    driven vision. The researcher-curators have to emphasize the human
    rights agenda as best they can within parameters set since 2003.

    The signs are that the tension between commemoration and human rights
    acti- vism, on the one hand, and the controversy it has generated,
    on the other, is begin- ning to undermine the museum's financial
    viability. As was revealed in late 2011, the CMHR did not have the
    money to finish construction and open as planned in 2013; that has
    been postponed till 2014. No level of government any longer regards
    the museum as an electoral asset, and they refuse to top-up promised
    levels of funding, demanding that the Friends of the CMHR make up
    the shortfall with private donations. Yet that source seems ever less
    promising now that the museum's commemorative dimension is perceived
    as diminished. Amid these 233

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 20 A. DIRK MOSES troubles, the museum's chair of the board,
    Winnipeg businessman Arni Thorstein- son, resigned, as did senior
    staff.

    94 At the time of writing (March 2012), the CMHR's prospects appeared
    as grim as a Winnipeg winter; a project foundering on its internal
    contradictions and misjudged political calculations.

    Acknowledgement Thanks to Alex Hinton, Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann,
    Adam Jones, Jo Carole Jones, Adam Muller, Chris Powell and the
    anonymous referees for critical com- ments on previous drafts. The
    usual disclaimers apply.

    Notes and References 1 CBC News, 'Human rights museum criticized
    at public meeting', 7 December 2011, http://www.cbc.ca/news/
    canada/manitoba/story/2011/12/07/mb-human-rights-museum-meeting-winnipeg.htm
    l?cmp=rss.

    2 Marjorie M. Halpin, - Play it again, Sam": reflections of a new
    museology', in Sheila Watson (ed.), Museums and their communities
    (Abingdon and New York: Routledge, 2007), p.

    50; Tony Bennett, The birth of the museum: history, theory, politics
    (London: Routledge, 1995); Exploritorium: the museum of science,
    art and human perception: www.exploratorium.edu.

    3 Paul Williams, Memorial museums: the global rush to commemorate
    atrocities (Oxford: Berg, 2008); Vivien Golding, Learning at the
    museum frontiers: identity, race and power (Farnham: Ashgate, 2009);
    Richard Sandell, Museums, prejudice and the reframing of difference
    (Abingdon and New York: Routledge, 2007).

    4 Caen-Normandy Memorial for History and Peace: www.memorial-caen.fr.

    The Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles: www.museumoftolerance.com.

    5 On the uniqueness debate, see A. Dirk Moses, 'Conceptual blockages
    and definitional dilemmas in the racial century: genocide of Indigenous
    peoples and the Holocaust', Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 36, No. 4,
    2002, pp. 7-36; Gavriel D. Rosenfeld, 'Between uniqueness and
    universalization: Holocaust memory at a dialec- tical crossroads',
    Dapim, Vol. 2011, pp. 359-369. An articulation of the double genocide
    thesis is Dovile Budryte, "'We call it genocide": Soviet deportations
    and repression in the memory of Lithuanians', in Robert S. Frey (ed.),
    The genocidal temptation: Auschwitz, Hiroshima, Rwanda, and beyond
    (Lanham, MD: University Press of America), p. 79. On the `bloodlands',
    see the forum on Timothy Snyder's Blood- lands: Europe between Hitler
    and Stalin (New York: Basic Books, 2010) in this journal, Vol. 13,
    No. 3, 2011, pp. 313-352.

    6 For the rival sites, see
    http://www.victimsofcommunism.org/media/article.php?article=3850
    and http://
    defendinghistory.com/tag/prague-declaration-on-european-conscience-and-commu
    nism. For the European Day of Remembrance, see
    http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=4EPUTEXT+TA+P6-
    TA-2008-04394-0+DOC+XML+VOHEN.

    7 On the question of multiculturalism and Canadian identity, see Rhoda
    E. Howard-Hassmann, "'Canadian" as an ethnic category: implications
    for multiculturalism and national unity', Canadian Public Policy,
    Vol. 25, No. 4, 1999, pp. 523-537, and the rejoinder by Yasmeen
    Abu-Laban and Daiva Stasiulis, 'Constructing "ethnic Canadians":
    the implications for public policy', Canadian Public Policy, Vol. 26,
    No. 4, 2000, pp. 477-487.

    8 A. Dirk Moses, 'Has the Holocaust helped us remember or forget other
    genocides? The Canadian Museum for Human Rights and its critics', in
    Doug Irvin, Alexander Hinton and Tom LaPointe (eds.), Hidden genocides:
    power, knowledge, memory (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press,
    forthcoming).

    9 Quoted in Guarding history: a study into the future, funding,
    and independence of the Canadian War Museum.

    Report of the Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs of the Standing Senate
    Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology (May 1998).

    10 Stefan Petelycky, Into Auschwitz, for Ukraine (Kingston and Kyiv:
    The Kashtan Press 1999/2008), p. 50.

    11 Guarding history. Emphasis added.

    12 Guarding history. Emphasis added.

    13 Quoted in Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.

    Minutes-Evidence (7 June 2000), para. 1645. The sense of entitlement
    was palpable with other Jewish representatives as well. See the
    statement of Nate Leipicer, Chair of the Holocaust Remembrance
    Committee for the CJC, para. 1605.

    14 'Sarkis Assadourian on Holocaust Memorial Day', Hansard, 27
    April 1995.

    234

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 21 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS 15
    http://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/biography/17.

    16 David Singer and Lawrence Grossman (eds.), American Jewish year
    book, 2000 (New York: American Jewish Committee, 2000), p. 275.

    17 Jeff Sallot, 'PM urged to set up genocide museum', Globe and Mail,
    27 January 1999.

    18 Andrij Kudla Wynnyckyj, 'Canadian MP submits bill supporting
    Genocide exhibit in Ottawa', Ukrainian Weekly, 7 March 1999. In fact,
    the editorial of the Ukrainian Weekly lambasted Sallot for apparently
    lam- pooning the ethnic appeasement gestures of the prime minister:
    `The Globe and Mail's clumsy dance of divi- siveness', Ukrainian
    Weekly, 31 January1999.

    19 Raja George Khouri, 'There is no hierarchy in genocide', National
    Post, 11 August 1999. Khouri was vice- president of the Canadian
    Arab Federation.

    20 David Lazarus and Paul Lungen, 'Holocaust museum may be derailed:
    Ukrainian-led effort could disrupt plans', Canadian Jewish News,
    9 April 1999.

    21 Lazarus and Lungen, 'Holocaust museum may be derailed'.

    22 Lazarus and Lungen, 'Holocaust museum may be derailed'. See
    also Singer and Grossman, American Jewish year book, 2000, p. 275:
    `Jewish groups declined to join this effort, fearing that such a
    genocide museum would lead to the abandonment of the Holocaust museum
    project. CJC president Ronen, pointing out that the idea for a genocide
    museum was being promoted primarily by Eastern European ethnic groups,
    charged that it was motivated by opposition to official recognition
    of the Holocaust's uniqueness'.

    23 Lynne Cohen, `Assadourian to advise PM on Foreign Policy', B'nai
    Brith Canada Press Release, 21 May 2004.

    24 Lazarus and Lungen, `Holocaust museum may be derailed'.

    25 `CJC welcomes government funding for new Canadian War Museum;
    renews call for Museum on the Holocaust and Human Rights': Press
    Release, No.19, 21 March 2000, http://www.cjc.ca/2000/03/21/cjc-
    welcomes-government- funding-for-new-canadian-war-museu
    m-renews-call-for-museum-on-the-holocaust- and-human-rights.

    26 Enzo Di Matteo, 'No, it's my genocide', Now Toronto, Vol. 19,
    No. 43, 22 June 2000, http://www.nowtoronto.

    com/news/story.cfm?content=123643.

    27 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage. Minutes-Evidence (7 June
    2000), para. 1545.

    28 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, paras. 1555-1600. Kafieh
    was formerly President of the Cana- dian Arab Federation and in 2010
    was legal counsel for the Canadian Islamic Congress.

    29 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, paras. 1615-1620.

    30 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, paras. 1625-1630.

    31 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, paras. 1630.

    32 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage. Minutes-Evidence (8
    June 2000).

    33 Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage. Minutes-Evidence (13 June
    2000), paras. 1120, 1140, 1150.

    34 Third Report of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.

    Subject-matter of Bill C-224, An Act to estab- lish by the beginning
    of the twenty-first century an exhibit in the Canadian Museum of
    Civilization to recog- nize the crimes against humanity as defined by
    the United Nations that have been perpetrated during the 20th century.

    Clifford Lincoln, Chair (June 2000).

    35 `Co-Chairs of the National Holocaust Remembrance Committee of
    Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC), hoping that Minister of Canadian
    Heritage would build National Museum on the Holocaust and Human
    Rights', 19 December 2001, http://www.cjc.ca/2001/12/19/letter-to-mini
    ster-sheila-copps-on-national -museum-on-the-
    holocaust-and-human-rights.

    36 On this debate, see Brian Klug, 'The collective Jew: Israel and
    the new antisemitism', Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 37, No. 2, 2003,
    pp. 117-138.

    37 http://humanrights.asperfoundation.com.

    38 Aldo Santin, 'Vibrant stories to come alive', Winnipeg Free Press,
    9 May 2003.

    39 Dan Lett, 'Making the museum', Winnipeg Free Press, 24 December
    2011; Friends of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, 'Timeline',
    http://www.friendsofcmhr.coin/about/history/timeline/index.cfm.

    40 Dan Lett, 'Human rights museum's ideals may be tough to attain',
    Winnipeg Free Press, 21 September 2009.

    41 Lett, `Making the museum'.

    42 Lett, 'Making the museum'; CBC News, `Feds fund
    national human rights museum', 17 April 2003, http://
    www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2003/04/17/museum_asper030417.html 43 Bill
    Gladstone, 'Canadian philanthropist wants new museum with Holocaust
    gallery', Canadian Jewish Con- gress/Jewish Telegraphic Agency,
    19 May 2003, http://www.cjc.ca/2003/05/29/canadian-philanthropist-
    wants-new-museum-with-holocaust-gal lery.

    44 Gladstone, `Canadian philanthropist wants new museum with Holocaust
    gallery'.

    45 A copy of the letter, addressed to Paul M. Grod and Andrew
    Hladyshevsky of the UCC, is attached to the Ukrainian Canadian Civil
    Liberties Association submission to the Content Advisory Committee
    of the 235

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 22 A. DIRK MOSES CMHR, 11 June 2009: 'The Canadian Museum
    for Human Rights: a Canadian Ukrainian perspective', http://
    www.uccla.ca/CMHR_IlJune09.pdf.

    46 David O'Brien, 'Museum to respect Ukrainian rights', Winnipeg Free
    Press, 1 December 2003.

    47 George Shirinian, 'Canadian Museum for Human Rights and the Armenian
    community', Asbarez, 21 Febru- ary 2012.

    48 Petelycky, Into Auschwitz, for Ukraine, p. 50. Roman Serbyn,
    'Echoes of the Holocaust in Jewish-Ukrainian relations: the
    Canadian experience', Ukrainian Quarterly, Vol. 60, No 12, 2004,
    pp. 215-226. Members of the 'Galicia' Division were screened by
    British authorities before emigration to Canada, where the commis- sion
    indicted none for war crimes for lack of evidence. Howard Margolian,
    Unauthorized Entry: the truth about Nazi war criminals in Canada,
    1946-1956 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2000).

    49 Paul Samyn, 'Asper-led museum sets off alarm bells: view of genocide
    said too exclusive', Winnipeg Free Press, 27 February 2003.

    50 Aldo Santin, 'Vibrant stories come to life', Winnipeg Free Press,
    9 May 2003. This quotation is Santin's ren- dering of Gail Asper's
    statement to him.

    51 Asper Foundation, Irael [sic] Asper announces plans to
    create Canadian Museum for Human Rights', 17 April 2003,
    http://www.friendsofcmhr.com/news_room/news_releases/index.cfm?id=23.

    The next short paragraph is tacked on as an un-integrated afterthought:
    'The Nazis also targeted for murder people with mental and physical
    disabilities, Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) and Poles for racial, ethnic,
    or national reasons.

    Millions more, including Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals, Soviet
    prisoners of war, Ukrainians and politi- cal dissidents also suffered
    serious subjugation and death under Nazi Germany'.

    52 Asper Foundation, Medial Advisory, 'Congressman Tom Lantos to
    meet with 250 Asper Foundation Holo- caust and Human Rights Studies
    program participants from Canada on Capitol Hill', 20 May 2003,
    http:// humanrights.asperfoundation.com/site/press/5-14-03.pdf.

    53 Paul Samyn, 'War museum lacks gallery on Holocaust', Winnipeg Free
    Press, 8 May 2005.

    54 Rhonda Spivak, 'Tanenbaum donates $1 million to rights museum',
    Canadian Jewish News, 13 March 2008.

    55 Barney Sneiderman, 'Holocaust is unique in way', Winnipeg Free
    Press, 13 December 2003. See also his `Holocaust bashing: the profaning
    of history', Manitoba Law Journal, No. 26, No. 3, 1999, pp. 319-334.

    56 Lubomyr Luciuk, 'All genocide victims must be hallowed', Ukrainian
    Weekly, 7 March 2004.

    57 Lubomyr Luciuk, 'The Holodomor was unique', UCCLA, 5 February 2004,
    http://www.uccla.ca/search/ results.php?id=45.

    58 Colin Campbell, 'Controversy over National
    Museum of Human Rights in Winnipeg', Maclean's, 27 March
    2006,http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=MIARTM00129
    31.

    59 In his acceptance speech, Harper said that 'I know that one set of
    policies that has led you to confer this honour is the more balanced,
    consistent and principled stands we have upheld on critical foreign
    policy issues like the Middle East since taking office more than three
    years ago.... One of the most lasting and tangible of all our actions
    is one in which the Jewish community has played a very large role,
    particularly the Asper family of Winnipeg, and that is, of course,
    the establishment of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights'. 'Prime
    Minister Harper Receives Saul Hayes Human Rights Award, May 31, 2009',
    http://www.pm.gc.ca/eng/ media.asp?id=2603. During the 2011 elections,
    David Asper wrote to Jewish voters urging them to support Harper
    because he 'defended the right of the Jewish people to live in peace
    and security, without equi- vocating and pandering for votes from
    Israel's enemies'. See 'The letter that David Asper wrote', http://www.

    jewishpostandnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=216:a sper
    &catid=45:rokmicron ews-fp-1&Itemid=70.

    60 Private members' bill for Holocaust memorial. Parliamentary Debates,
    Hansard, 8 December 2009, paras 1805, 1830.

    61 Private members' bill for Holocaust memorial. Parliamentary Debates,
    Hansard, 8 December 2009, para.

    1835. The site of the Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat
    Antisemitism is http://www.cpcca.ca/ about.htm.

    62 The Canadian Museum for Human Rights major donors, 28 September
    2011, http://www.friendsofcmhr.com/ resource/file/donorlist.pdf.

    63 The Canadian Museum for Human Rights major donors; O'Brien,
    'Museum to respect Ukrainian rights'.

    64 An - 1i Thorsteinson, chairperson, 'Report to the Minister of
    Canadian Heritage on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights', Table 7,
    http://www.pch.gc.ca/pc-ch/consIttn/dp-hr/index-eng.cfm. Lubymor
    Luciuk, 'A politicized museum', The Mark, 1 April 2011.

    65 http://www.bnaibrith.ca/files/211009.pdf. See also the site of its
    parent, The National Task Force for Holo- caust Education, Remembrance,
    and Research, www.holocaustbbctaskforce.ca.

    66http://humanrightsmuseum.ca/programs-and-events/programs/content-advisory-co
    mmittee-final-rePort.

    67 Ira Basen, 'Memory becomes a minefield at Canada's Museum for
    Human Rights', Globe and Mail, 20 August 2011.

    236

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 23 THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS 68 Contents Advisory
    Committee Final Report (25 May 2010), pp. 42-43. Cf. p. 88.

    69 Friends of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, 'Timeline',
    http://www.friendsofcmhr.com/aboutl history/timeline/index.cfm; Angela
    Cassie, Letter to Editor, Jewish Post and News, 17 November 2010.

    70 `UCCLA: broken promise made to Ukrainian
    Canadians provoked controversy', 17 December 2010, http://
    www.ucc.ca/2010/12/17/uccla-broken-promises-made-to-ukrainian-canadians-prov
    oked-controversy.

    71 'German-Canadian group criticizes museum for focus on Holocaust',
    Ottawa Citizen, 19 December 2010.

    72 The card also states, inter alia, that 'Instead two communities are
    being given privileged, permanent and pro- minent exhibition spaces,
    elevating the horrors suffered by a few above all others'.

    73 Rhonda Spivak, 'Postcard suggests Jews as pigs, critics say',
    Canadian Jewish News, 14 April 2011; UCCLA Media Release, 'Controversy
    over Canadian Museum for Human Rights: UCCLA's Position', 8 April
    2011, http://www.uccla.ca/Controversy.pdf.

    74 Charles Lewis, 'Rights museum needs a rethink, academic says',
    National Post, 5 April 2011. Sam Moyn's book, The last utopia: human
    rights in history (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2010)
    also takes this line. Marrus and Moyn were invited to discuss their
    views with the CMHR on 11 November 2011.

    75 Dan Lett, 'My academic is bigger than your academic', Winnipeg
    Free Press, 15 April 2011; Dan Lett, `Measured museum debate welcome',
    Winnipeg Free Press, 6 September 2011.

    76 Roger Smith, 'How genocide should be represented
    in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights', 24 February
    2011,http://www.zoryaninstitute.org/Announcements/How%20Genocide%20Should%20be%20
    Represente d%20in%20the%20CMHR%20v20.pdf; George Shirinian,
    'Genocide is not genocide in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights',
    22 August 2011, http://www.genocidestudies.org/Announcements/Genocide%
    20Multicultural ism %20and%20the%20CMHR.pdf.

    77 On Grod's views, see Charles Lewis, 'Rights museum: is it proper
    that the Holocaust gets special billing?', National Post, 7 January
    2011.

    78 James Bezan, 'Why the Holodomor deserves a place
    in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights', 2 February
    2011, http://www. ucc.ca/2011/02/03/statement-by-mp-j
    ames-bezan-on-the-canadi an -museum-of-human-
    rights; Leon Bennoit, 'Ukrainians deserve appropriate
    spot in Canadian Museum for Human Rights', 8 February
    2011,http://www.leonbenoit.ca/news/ukrainians_deserve_appropriate_spot_in_canadia
    n_museu m_of human_rights; Statement of Liberal Members of
    Parliament on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights', 23 February 2011,
    http://www.ucc.ca/2011/02/24/statement-from-liberal-mps-on-the-canadian-
    museum-for-human-rights; Myron Love, 'Tory MP wants Holodomor display
    in Museum', Canadian Jewish News, 17 March 2011.

    79 UCC Media Release, `UCC Welcomes appointment of
    Dr. Lindy Ledohowski to Human Rights Museum board', 18 March
    2011,http://www.ucc.ca/2011/03/18/ucc-welcomes-appointment-of-dr-lindy-ledohowski
    - to-human-rights-museum-board/.

    80 James Adams, 'Ukrainian Canadian Congress Campaigns for inclusion
    in Human Rights Museum', Globe and Mail, 21 December 2010.

    81 Editorial, 'Museum complaint parochial', Winnipeg Free Press,
    24 March 2011; Staff Writer 'The Jewish Perspective', Winnipeg Free
    Press, 14 December 2010.

    82 Michael Kaminer, 'Ukrainian Association objects to Rights Museum's
    special treatment of Holocaust', Forward, 10 January 2011. See also
    Eric Vernon, 'Canadian Museum for Human Rights is quite Canadian',
    Kingston Whig-Standard, 22 December 2010.

    83 Catherine Chatterley, 'Director's Log: why create an Institute
    for the Study of Antisemitism?', http://web.me.

    com/cisa/CISA/Director.html. See also her 'The war against the
    Holocaust', Winnipeg Free Press, 2 April 2011.

    84 http://www.jewishwinnipeg.org/page.aspx?id=211471.

    85 Rhonda Spivak, 'Open letter to Lubomyr Luciuk, Director of Research,
    Ukrainian Civil Liberties Association, Re: CMHR', Winnipeg Jewish
    Review, 31 March 2011.

    86 Yude Henteleff, 'Critical conversations
    with Canadians: the work of the Content Advisory
    Committee', University of Manitoba, 5 January 2012,
    http://law.robsonhall.ca/the-distinguished-visitors-lecture-series/
    now-playing/753-yude-henteleff-critical-conversations-with-canadians-the-wor
    k-of-the-content-advisory-co mmittee.

    87 Bernie Bellan, 'What's happening with the Holocaust gallery in
    the new Canadian Museum for Human Rights?' Jewish Post and News,
    17 November 2010.

    88 Bernie Bellan, 'Human rights museum won't open until 2014', Jewish
    Post and News, 8 December 2011.

    89 Clint Curie, 'Imagining a human rights museum', CMHR talking point
    paper, 11 November 2011.

    90 Stuart Murray, presentation at the University of Manitoba in the
    'The idea of a human rights museum' speaker series, 9 September 2011:
    http://humanrightsmuseum.ca/about-museurn/speeches-our-museum-leaders/
    speech-delivered-president-and-ceo-stuart-murray-university. For
    other contributions to this series organized by Adam Muller,
    see:http://chminfo/resources/critical-conversations/seminar-readings/critical-co
    nversatio~U ns-podcasts.

    237

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Page 24 A. DIRK MOSES 91 On that question, see Vinay Lal, 'Genocide,
    barbaric others, and the violence of categories', American His-
    torical Review, Vol. 103, 1998, pp. 1187-1190, and Mark Mazower,
    'Violence and the state in the twentieth century', American Historical
    Review, Vol. 107 No. 4, 2002, p. 1160.

    92 I make this point in Moses, 'Conceptual blockages and definitional
    dilemmas in the racial century', p. 15, but owe this formulation to
    one of the anonymous referees.

    93 Shirinian, 'Canadian Museum for Human Rights and the Armenian
    community'.

    94 Myron Love 'Cash shortfall delays human rights museum', Canadian
    Jewish News, 5 January 2012. Thor- steinson remains on the board of
    the Friends of the CMHR. As of March 2012, museum supporters are trying
    to raise 'almost $200 from private and corporate donors': James Adams,
    'Fundraising goal jumps for human rights museum', Winnipeg Free Press,
    7 March 2012.

    Notes on contributor A. Dirk Moses is professor of global and colonial
    history at the European Univer- sity Institute in Florence, Italy,
    and associate professor of history at the University of Sydney. He
    is the author of German intellectuals and the Nazi past (2007) and
    senior editor of the Journal of Genocide Research.

    238
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