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Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2022

Virtual Montreal Fountain Tours: An Aqueous Element Returns to Phillips Square

 

 

Geographic Coordinates: 

45.503863250909, -73.56879683910705


 Beginning in about 1840, rich merchants like Thomas Phillips (1771-1842) a construction entrepreneur and city councillor, sub-divided rural properties in what is now downtown Montreal, creating a suburban neighbourhood for the wealthy.

When Phillips died in 1842, his widow donated the park to be used as a memorial to her late husband, writes historian and former Gazette journalist Alan Hustak in Downtown Montreal: An Opinionated Guide to the City’s Squares, Churches, & Underground City (Vehicule Press, 2004).

Source: Scott, Marian“Redesigned Phillips Square will be forested oasis, Montreal mayor says : The square will have 75 trees, up from just a dozen now, under a renovation plan announced by Mayor Valérie Plante on Tuesday. “ The Montreal Gazette,  January 22, 2019. ( Source: https://bit.ly/3zG7dwa )


The square has undergone changes, since its inception with a renovation in 1995. The square became a hub for commercial enterprises. Such as  Henry Birks & Sons, established in 1879 and moving to this location two years later.


Directly across from Phillips Square stands the Henry Morgan Building, which housed the Canadian department store colloquially known as Morgan’s; which Henry Morgan founded in 1845. It is now the flagship store of the Hudson’s Bay Company a large Canadian merchant. To the south of the square, behind the Memorial to King Edward VII, on Cathcart Street, stands the Canada Cement Company building built in 1922. This building was the first one in Montreal to have an under ground parking garage. If you are interested in the history of the automobile in Montreal here is a little venture into the past from the city's archives:, in French: https://bit.ly/3A4DmO9

 

It has only been during its latest renovation in a two-year 50-million dollar project that the square acquired the small installation of water jets. These jets will add a nice touch once all the trees added to the square’s renovation become more mature, the square will definitely become more of an oasis in the centre of our city.


The project is part of a municipal plan to green the downtown core. Montreal’s Mayor Valérie Plante, said during the inauguration of the renovated square on Monday June 27, 2022: “Our objective is to make downtown Montreal the greenest downtown in North America!”


The square now has an aqueous element where none has existed since Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau shut down Montreal’s public rest rooms for a number of dubious reasons. From claims they were gambling dens to places for sexual encounters, though their closure was most likely a cost-cutting measure.
The public restrooms were part a make work project during former Montreal Mayor Camillien Houde in the mid-1930s.


From this archival photograph from the Conrad Poirier collection at the Bibliothèque et Archives National du Québec one can clearly see sets of steps descending underground on the east and west sides of the square. The photograph was taken from the 17th floor of the University Tower Building on June 9, 1937.

 

To see the fountain in action visit https://bit.ly/3JqzT0u and please subscribe to my YouTube channel, like and leave your comments.

To see the episodes you have missed please check my playlist at: https://bit.ly/3oCZ32m .

Virtual Montreal Fountain Tours is released weekly, on Thursdays, with a short appearing on Mondays.

Closed Captioning is provided for those with hearing difficulty in English, and subtitles are available in both French and Ukrainian.





 

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

“Run Nawrocki Run: Escape from Banff Prison” : The Internment of Ukrainians During WWI - A personal Tale

Run Nawrocki Run: Escape from Banff Prison”: Norman Nawrocki’s Ongoing Creative and Learning Process


Norman Nawrocki in character
as Prisoner #158 with his shovel
PHOTO CREDIT: Joyce Valbuena

The Internment of Ukrainians during WWI took place in Canada due to legislation which was passed on August 22, 1914. It was known as the War Measures Act and gave the Governor in Council extraordinary powers, “during time of war, invasion, and insurrection, real or apprehended [feared].” The Cabinet would be able to pass laws without going through the Parliament, technically, Canada’s lower house, commonly known as the House of Commons, or just the commons.

One of these powers was was for “arrest, detention, exclusion and deportation.” It was that effected so many Ukrainians and others who were feared by the government of the the day. “Approximately 80,000 people had to register as “enemy aliens” and were compelled to report regularly to the police. Their freedom of speech, movement and association were also restricted” ["Ukrainian Internment in Canada." The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Article published May 24, 2018; Last Edited June 05, 2018.]


Throughout my university years in the 1980s academic papers began to appear on the subject of internment. I followed these and there were other mediums telling the story of many who had become victims due to the War Measures Act. During the Second World War it was used to intern Italians, Japanese and German Canadians and I lived through implications of the this act as a young boy seeing troops in combat gear and heavy military vehicles on the streets of Montreal during the October Crisis in 1970.

Last Meeting and Reconnect

While studying and working at McGill University in the late 19980s and early 1990s I met many different people. One of them was Norman Nawrocki, originally from Vancouver but living in the student ghetto in Montreal when we met. At the time I recall Nawrocki had told me that he was just discovering his Ukrainian roots. It had been the Ukrainian Students’ Club at McGill which had brought us together. We had gotten together a few times at club meetings and afterwards socially. I stayed in touch with him until the summer of 1991 and they lost contact with him for over three decades. Often the alliteration of his name, first and family, would pop into my head and I would think: “I wonder where Norman Nawrocki is today?”

On December 2nd of this year an announcement from a common friend of ours, I found out that he was leading a very active and creative life. So I reached out to him as he had been CC’d in the email I received. A few days later I asked him when we last saw one another he wrote me: “We met on June 25th, 1991. I found a piece of paper with notes I took during our meeting, references to the "UCC (Ukrainian Canadian Congress) Parliamentary Interns, the Uke Info Bureau in Ottawa, ... and Przenechaya, the Ukrainian Wheat Vodka.” I’m a bit of an archivist!” Hence, I was not surprised to see just how prolific Nawrocki has been when I received the notice about his one person play entitled “Run Nawrocki Run: Escape from Banff Prison”, and some of the thought-provoking works he has produced and published in the past.

From the announcement and link to the Facebook event I’d been sent, I learnt “Nawrocki has written, staged & toured over 20 theatre & cabaret creations since 1986, authored 14 books of poetry, short fiction & a novel (with translations in French & Italian), & released over 60 albums of music & spoken word, solo & with his diverse bands.I think his self-proclaimed being “a bit of an archivist!” Has served him well in his creative endeavours.

I had pitched this story idea to The Ukrainian Weekly, and wrote it but it never ran, as we know that everyone is very closely following events in Ukraine.

From Saturday December 11th @ 9am EST until Friday December 17th, 9pm EST his one person play will be available on his YouTube channel for free: https://bit.ly/3oy0tvO . The trailer is already available on his Facebook [ www.facebook.com/norman.nawrocki ] and YouTube pages.


Learning More About Nawrocki

I contacted Nawrocki to learn a little more about him, his rediscovery of his Ukrainian heritage, his creative process, accolades and the intrinsic reason of why he wrote this play, the music and performed together with his sister Vivian.

 

Uamuzik: Norman, you and I met many years ago before Ukraine's independence. We often discussed some of our personal histories, though at the time I believe you had really only started to discover your roots. When and how did it all begin?

As a child, I learned that I was Ukrainian (and Polish), but that I should never speak about it because I might be discriminated against. This had been the experience of my mother growing up Ukrainian-Canadian in Manitoba. So, I hid my Ukrainian self, and only explored it on annual family visits with my mother’s family in rural western Manitoba. This had been the experience of my mother growing up Ukrainian-Canadian in Manitoba. So, I hid my Ukrainian self, and only explored it on annual family visits with my mother’s family in rural western Manitoba.

We were never part of the ‘Ukrainian’ community growing up in Vancouver; only our so very distant Manitoba family one. We were never encouraged to learn or speak Ukrainian, because it was considered more important for us to simply blend in and be accepted by ‘white people, the English,’ as my mom would say.

Many, many years later, I realized it was time for me to honour my culture, to honour my family, and to honour myself by exploring my Ukrainian roots. This was prompted by music – re-discovering the Ukrainian-Canadian music I had grown up with as a child, hearing at Manitoba family functions and occasionally sung and played at home by my Mom. By 1985, I had formed a ‘cabaret rock ’n roll' band in Montreal. As a violinist, I wanted to learn how to play this crazy, wild, magical Ukrainian folk music that was buried somewhere deep inside me. Melodies that would play in my head. Tunes that I knew but didn’t know. I started to dig out old family LPs, I transcribed the music, and learned how to play Kolomeykas, Arkan and more. And I realized, this was a big part of who I was.


I wanted to know more. So I started doing the research, interviewing family members, reading about Ukrainians in Canada, Ukrainian history. I visited the Ukrainian gifts and books shop on Boulevard St-Laurent in Montreal, buying bargain old LPs, newer cassettes, and even Ukrainian plates and bowls to place on my kitchen table. I had none of this stuff growing up.

Norman and his sister Vivian Nawrocki,
in Vancouver, BC.
PHOTO CREDIT: a passing stranger :)



I learned the music, shared it with my band members, and we recorded it, released it, and toured Canada, the US and Europe with it, and met people who wanted to know, ‘what is this crazy, wild, totally dance-able music you are playing for us, we love it!’ We played it in Montreal for St-Jean Baptiste Day celebrations, and local Quebecois people went nuts over it, demanding more.

I kept reading: ‘Men in Sheepskin Coats;’ ‘The Ukrainians in Manitoba;’ ‘The Ukrainian Canadians, A History;’ Ivan Franko’s short stories, etc.

This rediscovering my roots process continues to today, 2021.


 

Uamuzik: Your works are base on a great deal of personal experience, reflection and contemplation. What drives your process?

I want to know more and I want to share what I know, what I consider significant, valuable, worth knowing, with others. If I decide to do a play based in history, I do a lot of background research, online, library books, interviews with those who know more. Once I have all the facts, I pour them into the sifter/blender and push the start button. I attempt to discover the focal point, the essence, the core spirit for the work, and do the ‘onion thing,’ but backwards: I construct the onion from the centre out, adding layers, but being selective: this is creative, this is engaging, this belongs, fits in this piece. This doesn’t. This can be discarded or set aside for a future longer work. This has to go back into the blender, and be reconsidered.

I fill notebooks with ideas, lines, visions, then review, review, review, write, write and re-write.

The script for my current Banff play, for example, has gone through about 20 revisions, 20 versions easily, maybe more.

 

Uamuzik: How do you react to commentary of Canadian playwrights like David Fennario about your earlier productions?

It is so heartwarming, so gratifying, so humbling to hear someone like the great Canadian playwright, David Fennario, praise my work. Even more humbling when he follows that up asking me to act in one of his plays! I was thrilled to read his comments. I am such a scattered artist – I do many things – I write, I compose, play & record music, I act, I publish poetry, short stories, a novel, I produce shows, I tour with my work – I am a bit of this, a bit of that. Someone like David is an accomplished playwright. I’m a guy who likes to write, perform and produce plays. So when someone of his stature says something about my work, it’s inspiring, really inspiring. But it’s also equally heartwarming to hear the words of others in the audiences, of people I don’t even know who thank me for sharing the stories, the history they never heard of, never learned in school.

 

Uamuzik: As a story teller I am always fascinated by the process of others. When you uncovered this personal history, how did it hit you?

It hit me in the gut: three possibly distant family members were imprisoned and forced to do slave labour by Canada simply because they were poor, unemployed and Ukrainian? Like WTF? I had heard so many stories growing up about the endless prejudice, discrimination and outright racism that older family members endured when they came to Canada and tried to "fit in,” to just lead ordinary lives like other Canadians. I heard about the jokes, the slurs, the second class treatment on the job, if they could get a job, the attempts to change their accents, their names, their way of being to try to be more ‘white, more English,’ knowing they could never wash out the ‘Bohunk’ tattooed onto their skin, their tongues, their mannerisms, their way of living.

I heard about my relatives always dealing with lying, cheating, abusive bosses, because they were considered ‘just dumb Ukrainians,’ good for nothing but hard labour, always underpaid.

I heard about these forced labour camps, about being forced to report to the Mounties.

So I did the research and uncovered the truths, the hidden history, the repressed stories, the pain and suffering that my own family members lived with, and now, these distant family members probably suffered as well, only it was more intense behind the barbed wire prisons for them.

It made me sad and angry, but also inspired me to tell their stories, to tell this story as best I could with the means I have : words, music, theatre, visuals. I wanted to honour their memories, their struggles, their hopes and dreams for a better life. This was what my ancestors always wanted when they came to Canada, it’s why they came here, like so many other immigrants, yesterday and today: for a better life. They didn’t deserved to be treated like dogs. None of them.


Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Liars of Moscovy - Myths debunked


History as it should be written and not as it has been by the liars of Moscovy for close to the last half millenium. I don't want to take credit for this document, but it was posted in its original language of Russian, by a good friend of mine on Facebook. When I tried to find the original author I couldn't; however I found the original document posted on thousands of different forums. I took the the time to verify as many of these facts as possible and added some addition information from some of the research I did.

Below my translation from the Russian language, you will find the original document as posted by my friend in Kyiv.

Let the Russians refute these 10 facts:

1. The state called – Muscovy was renamed to Russia by Tsar Peter 1 only in the 18th century, in 1721.

2. A tribe called the river flowing through the region Moskva, in the Moksha language this can be translated to mean “dirty water”. There is no other language in the world which can translate this word. The word - “kremlin” is a Tartar word which means “a fortification on a hill”.

3. In the Middle Ages all European cartographers worked and created their maps all the way to the borders of Rus' (Rus' – is the territory of contemporary Ukraine!) The Ulus (a turko-mongolian sociological term which delinates a particular group of people) of Moscovy, with its Finnish people, had always been designated as part of the Horde and Europe appropriately considered it to be part of Asia.

4. Moscovy (Russia) paid tribute to the Crimean Khan(!!!!!), its sovereign and their Host, who was a successor of the Golden Horde until 1700. The Tsar of Moscovy met with the Crimean ambassador on Poklannaya Hill who was on horseback, while the Tsar was on foot leading the horse by the bridle to the Kremlin, once inside he sat the ambassador on the throne and knelt before him.

5. In Moscovy in the year 1610, the dynasty of Genghis Khan came to an end Morza Gudun – better known to the world as Boris Gudunov, and then throned Alexey Koshka an ancestor of the Finnish Kobyla family, and in marrying him to the church they renamed him and gave him the surname Romanov, as if he had come from Rome to rule over Moscovy!

6. Catherine the Second, after the end of the rule of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, made a decree that all the Finno-Urgic tribes of Moscovy to be named socalled Great Russians while the Ruthenians or true Rus people to be called Little Russians!

7. No one ever saw the original agreement of Peryaslav of 1654 which was allgedly signed by Bohdan Khmelnytsky and the emissaries of Tsar Alexey of the created Romanovs!?

8. For many centuries, archaeologosts have tried to locate artifacts which would confirm the location of the Battle of Kulikovo, though searches have proven fruitless in proving that such a battle of Dmitri Dontsov being victorious over Mamai ever took place. To date it is but a myth created based on the finding of a few artifacts by a procurator of the Most Holy Synod, on Stepan Nechayev. Such a position allowed him to create any myth he chose. So until now this myth of the battle has been bellowed out, though there is little proof it ever took place!

9. The Pskov, Novgorod and Smolenks oblasts of Russia – were all former principalities Slavic- Rus Kingdom and had nothing to do with Finno-Urgic Moscovy, whilst they were respectively occupied by the Horde in 1462, 1478 and 1654. And Slavic tribes or peoples never lived in other areas of Moscovy, the present Russian Federation.

10. The Golden Horde and her daughter - Muscovy – were the only nations in the world that ever enslaved their own people. This explains the eternal backwardness of Moscovy which is so rich in natural resources as compared to European countries which are at a disadvantage when it comes to thse resources. Indeed, the efficiency of free people is much higher than that of slaves...


One of my followers on Twitter commented that this write up reminded him of a particular song. So I would like to include that video here for all who follow my museable musings here and who understand Ukrainian you will agree with my friend on Twitter.

Пусть россияне опровергнут эти 10 фактов:

1. Державу с названием - Московия царь Петр 1 переименовал в Россию, аж в 18 веке, в 1721 году.

2. Племя Мокши назвало свою речку Москва,а перевод этого названия, с языка Мокши, звучит как "грязная вода". Любые другие языки Мира не могут перевести слово Москва. Слово "кремль"- татарское и обозначает укрепления на возвышенности.

З. В средние века все картографы Европы писали и проводили границу Европы вдоль границ Руси (Русь - это территория нынешней Украины!!!) Московия - улус, со своими финскими народами, всегда была составляющей Орды и ее Европа справедливо относила к Азии.

4. Московия (Россия) платила дань Крымскому Хану(!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!), своему СУВЕРЕНУ и ХОЗЯИНУ ,который был правоприемником Золотой Орды, вплоть до 1700 года. Царь Московии встречал крымского посла на Поклонной горе, садил его на своего коня, сам пешим, под узду, вел коня с крымским послом в Кремль,
садил его на свой трон и вставал перед ним на колени!?

5. В 1610 году, в Московии на Борисе Годунове (мурза Гудун) закончилась династия Ченгиз идов (родственник Чингисхана) и на трон возвели Алексея Кошку с финского рода Кобылы, а при венчании его на Царство церковь дала ему фамилию Романов, якобы прибывший с Рима править Московией!

6. Екатерина 2-я, после оккупации последней свободной Руськой Державы-Великого Княжества Литовского (тер. Беларуси) в 1795 г., своим приказом велела назвать угро-финские племена Московии какими-то великороссами, а украинцев - истинных русичей – малороссами!

7. Никто и никогда не видел в оригинале договор о воссоединении между Московией и Украиной якобы подписанный Б.Хмельницким и Царем А.Романовым!?

8. Уже несколько столетий археологи Московии ищут артефакты подтверждающие достоверность Куликовской битвы, но пока безуспешно, вот только басню о победе Д.Донского над Мамаем распевают до сих пор, на все
голоса!?

9. Псковская, Новгородская, Смоленская области России,- это бывшие славяно-руськие Княжества и до угро-финской Московии не имели никакого отношения, покуда Московия - Орда не оккупировала их соответственно в 1462, в 1478, и в 1654 годах. А в других областях РФ (Московии) никогда не обитали славянские племена и народы.

10. Золотая Орда и ее дочь - Московия,- это единственные страны Мира, которые держали в рабах собственный народ. Это и объясняет вечную отсталость богатой на природные ископаемые Московию от сравнительно обделенных на природные ресурсы европейских стран. Ведь эффективность работы свободных людей гораздо выше, чем рабов...


Vasyl Pawlowsky

 Independent Consultant
The commentary of this was first published on wpawlowsky.com site.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Shedding some light on Canadian History

Yesterday, I paid a visit to film maker Yuriy Luhovy's with a friend of mine who wanted to return a copy of the Ukrainian version of his multi-award winning documentary Genocide Revealed. During the course of his questioning Yuriy about other films I was surprised to learn that it was at that moment that that friend had first heard of the internment of Ukrainians during WWI.

He was equally surprised to learn of the Internment camp at Spirit Lake, Quebec, that at Field, Alberta and the many others. We gave him a short history lesson and mentioned how the father of the former mayor of the community Greenfield Park on Montreal's south shore, Steve Olinyk, though while not interned, had to report to police weekly to have his identity papers stamped, and to add insult to injury his father had to pay the police two dollars for them to do so.

For other episodes on that black page in Canadian history, and the precedent for the internment of Italian and Japanese Canadians during WWII, check out the Internment pages on InfoUkes.com. A more recent recount of a darker part of Banff, that somehow took nearly 100 years to be brought into the light in the Calgary Herald: "Luciuk: Banff finally tells story of Ukrainian internees - So-called enemy aliens were forced to do labour in national park"

Vasyl Pawlowsky Independent Consultant

Saturday, March 31, 2007

On the brink of another (r)evolution

While the topic line may not seem to have anything to do with the music or entertainment industry it was the events of the Orange (R)evolution in 2004-2005 that eventually led me to meet an interesting film maker this past Thursday. During the heady events of the Orange (R)evolution my Kum (the father of my godson), was moved from the tent city on Khreschatyk, Kyiv's main street to run the camp that had sprung up by the Verkhovna Rada. There he met the son of the film maker I just met, actually I probably met the son as well during the times I would lead journalists up to that encampment, in order that fill the pages of their publications with the human side of the Orange (R)evolution.

Just a little over a year ago my Kum called me up. "I have some work for you. How do you feel about editing a film script?" Given I was freelancing at the time I came to an agreement with my Kum as a middle man. I received the five episodes, written out on a minute by minute technical screenplay, including the set, characters, how they are dressed, technical equipment needed to shoot the scene. After about working on this fascinating story on and off for about a week I was called and told the project was called off. I never got paid for the work, but at the time I just didn't care. I was fascinated by a story of five different epochs of pro-Ukrainian and early Ukrainian history which were episodes which could be either shown on TV as five different shows, or as a feature length film. All woven together by the events of the Orange (R)evolution, and the contemporary life of an archaeologist who has been piecing together the history of this part of the world, and the people who once inhabited the lands that now make up Ukraine.<

A couple of nights ago my Kum called me up once again, and asked me where I was. He joined me and a friend of mine Karolina for a drink, they had met at Karolina's birthday party earlier in the year so it wasn't a problem that he joined us at our table. Somehow, we had come full circle, but this time it wasn't for editing the script that I had to abandon last spring, but it was a request that I meet with the film maker and see if I could somehow now assist in completing this work which is now 80% complete. I agreed to meet him on Thursday afternoon.

As I walked from my apartment that morning down Liuteranska Street near the Presidential Administration I experienced an extremely high presence of police and Berkut, special tactical forces, along Liuteranska in three buses on the street itself and a number of other buses parked in the courtyards behind the houses that line the street. I felt like I had just returned to the time leading up to the Orange (R)evolution. I met the film maker and we introduced ourselves to one another. I told him a little about our company and my partner who could not make the meeting as he was in Western Ukraine taking care of some other business. He explained his situation, gave me a synopsis of each of the film's episodes and a promotional DVD of the film. I slipped the DVD into my laptop. As the film started to play, and as I watched I saw before my eyes the characters I had become familiar with when editing the script. I told him that my partner and I would take a look at it and see how would could help in finishing the film and how we would market it.

This morning as I walked down Liuteranska Street I saw Oleg Euvrolinerovych [he is a story in himself], Vladislav Kaskiv's of PORA's driver. I shook hands with him and in seconds Kaskiv came running out the door and jumped into the black Volkswagen van while trying to get his jacket on and shake my hand at the same time while at the same time saying, "Have to run to the Nasha Ukraina Party meeting, stay in touch!" Vlad and I have been friends since 1993. As the van pulled away he waved. His mother, pani Valya turned around to see who he had waved and then ran up to me gave me a big hug and invited me up to their flat for coffee. I couldn't refuse, pani Valya at times had been like a mother to me during my visits to Ukraine many years ago. Making me feel extremely comfortable, and while we were now neighbours I just never saw her very often.

While I sat on the couch and drank my coffee and basked in the warmth of a rich chocolate cake my mobile rang. It was the film maker, with a air of anxiousness in his voice."So what's your decision regarding my film?" I explained to him that I had only spoken to my partner and would only know today when he would return from L'viv and Ivano-Frankivsk. "I guess I will see you out on the barricades today at 17:00," he said. As I watched the Nasha Ukraina meeting live on Channel 5 and read the ticker at the bottom of the screen "20 buses of Party of Regions supporters have gathered by the river port" I thought to myself. /Yes, it's going to be a tense day! /Then I thought about what my room mate Myroslav Levytsky had said as I headed out of the apartment. "Stay out of the way of the cops! These guys are under different orders, and from different people!" He was right. We are possibly on the brink of a different (r)evolution.

Meanwhile, I am thinking about ways to find financing for this film, and so that Ukrainians can see their history on the screen. I history written by Ukrainians and not foreigners who have always meddled in our affairs and continue to do so to this day. I am certain that leading up to today's meeting on Maydan, cronies of Putin were on the line with their friends in the Party of Regions. They will never be able to be at peace with the fact that their Empire has crumbled and will no longer be as it once was.