From a machine gun wielding high school girl-yakuza boss to time travelling samurai; from sexual awakening in the final devastating days of
About 600 kilometres northwest of Montreal, in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of Quebec, there is a remote plot of land where at least
Thousands of Canadians originating from Eastern Europe were imprisoned within the barbed wire fences of internment camps across Canada between 1914 –
Yurij Fojczuk immigrated to Canada in 1912 and set up a homestead. He would come to be known as George Forchuk. Two
On Tuesday, 29 October 2013, at 1:30 pm, a commemorative plaque recalling the internment of Ukrainians and other Europeans during the First World War
On the 99th anniversary of the start of the First World War and Canada’s first national internment operations, a permanent memorial to the
Even before its planned opening in 2014, the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg, Manitoba has had its share of critics.