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	<title>Bancroft this Week</title>
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			<title>Standing up for Ukraine is standing up for democracy</title>
			<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com/?p=12338</link>
			<pubDate>Sat Jun 13 10:47:57 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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<p>MICHAEL RILEY<br />Staff</p>
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<p>RUSSIA INVADED UKRAINE&nbsp;on Feb. 24, despite a 1994&nbsp;treaty it signed, the Budapest&nbsp;Memorandum, guaranteeing Ukraine's sovereignty forever. The events over the past&nbsp;week have been difficult for those watching&nbsp;it unfold; but obviously far less difficult and&nbsp;painful than for the people of Ukraine themselves and for their family and friends who&nbsp;live abroad, including right here in Canada.<br />Canada has a large population of&nbsp;Ukrainian Canadian citizens, nearly 1.4&nbsp;million as of 2016. The first confirmed&nbsp;settlement of Ukrainians in Canada was in&nbsp;the late 19th century, when Ivan Pylypow&nbsp;helped to found the Edna-Star settlement&nbsp;east of Edmonton in 1892. I can't imagine&nbsp;what Ukrainian Canadians must be going&nbsp;through right now, seeing this tragedy&nbsp;occurring half a world away.<br />Ukrainian Canadian Oksana C. [last&nbsp;name withheld at her request], who lives&nbsp;in Flinton, Ontario, can not only imagine&nbsp;it, but is getting day to day feedback of the&nbsp;Russian invasion from her family who is&nbsp;still in Ukraine. On Feb. 28 she recounted&nbsp;to Bancroft This Week the details she has&nbsp;heard from them as the Russian invasion&nbsp;unfolds, saying that it has been a nightmare&nbsp;for the past four days.<br />“As I am writing to you at this moment,&nbsp;Ukraine is preparing for a nuclear attack&nbsp;and they are sending messages with information to each other on how to survive it.<br />My parents are there right now. My father&nbsp;is not fit for travel as he is very sick at the&nbsp;moment. My mom is looking after him.<br />My younger sister and her two small children [six-years-old and eight-months-old]&nbsp;together with my older sister crossed the&nbsp;Polish border last night and found temporary protection there. We are very thankful&nbsp;<br />to Poland and other neighbouring countries for giving&nbsp;women and children shelter,&nbsp;food and medical supplies.<br />My younger sister's husband&nbsp;stayed in Ukraine of course&nbsp;to join Ukrainian forces when&nbsp;needed to protect our land,”&nbsp;she says.<br />Oksana C. says she has&nbsp;heard first hand from her&nbsp;family there that Ukrainian&nbsp;major cities are getting&nbsp;destroyed and the Russians&nbsp;are trying to bomb army bases, hospitals,&nbsp;airports, roads, bridges, manufacturing sites,&nbsp;and hydro stations. She says that unidentified individuals are driving around large and&nbsp;small towns and marking spots with night vision paint for Russian air forces to hit.<br />She said there is even one on the main road&nbsp;near the church in her little town. However,&nbsp;she says that the Ukrainian army is standing&nbsp;strong, and that people are preparing and&nbsp;delivering home cooked meals and drinks&nbsp;for the Ukrainian troops.<br />“The support from around the world has&nbsp;been incredible. We see doctors and nurses&nbsp;coming from other countries to help wounded soldiers and civilians, we see food, medical and military supplies coming in. But the&nbsp;most important thing is here-we have heard&nbsp;from some of our soldiers that they are&nbsp;feeling our prayers. They&nbsp;don't understand how&nbsp;but they come out with&nbsp;minimal loss from deadly&nbsp;situations. They ask us&nbsp;to keep praying for them.<br />Please, continue to keep&nbsp;our Ukrainian soldiers and&nbsp;the people of Ukraine in&nbsp;your prayers,” she says.<br />If Canada doesn't do all&nbsp;it can to stand up for the&nbsp;Ukrainian people, there&nbsp;is also the extreme likelihood that once Russia takes over Ukraine,&nbsp;this will just whet their appetite and they'll&nbsp;invade other nations that used to be part&nbsp;of the Soviet Union to recapture, in their&nbsp;minds, past glories. And they may not stop&nbsp;there.<br />Putin has even implied that Russia&nbsp;would strike militarily and possibly with&nbsp;nuclear weapons, any country that comes to&nbsp;Ukraine's aid, including Canada. For example, on Feb. 27, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Russian embassy in Ottawa&nbsp;in solidarity to Ukraine, prompting Russia's&nbsp;foreign ministry to threaten retaliation if<br />Canada did not keep its diplomats safe. The&nbsp;prospect of Russia striking at and even taking over a rapidly thawing Canadian north&nbsp;is ever more a viable threat. Make no mistake, standing up for Ukraine is standing up&nbsp;for democracy, freedom, human rights and&nbsp;international law.<br />To its credit, Canada has taken definitive steps to denounce Russia's actions and&nbsp;impose sanctions on them. On Feb. 24,&nbsp;Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made it clear&nbsp;that Canada condemns Russia's attack on&nbsp;Ukraine and will take strong action to stand&nbsp;up for what is right and protect the rights&nbsp;and freedoms of the Ukrainian people. So&nbsp;far, Canada has imposed economic sanctions, sent military equipment and humanitarian aid, and taken steps to fast-track&nbsp;immigration for Ukrainians fleeing Ukraine&nbsp;and wanting to come to Canada. They have also sent additional military contributions to support NATO through Operation&nbsp;REASSURANCE and have authorized&nbsp;approximately 3,400 Canadian Armed&nbsp;Forces personnel to deploy to the NATO&nbsp;Response Force if they're required. While&nbsp;this a good start, hopefully Canada will keep up the pressure on Russia and do even&nbsp;more until Russia leaves Ukrainian soil.<br />So yes, stand up for Ukraine and pray for&nbsp;their success against the Russian invasion&nbsp;as we would stand up for Canada, to protect&nbsp;democracy, the international rule of law,&nbsp;human rights and every country's right to&nbsp;their freedom and national sovereignty. If&nbsp;we don't do this, Russia, emboldened by&nbsp;any success it has in Ukraine, most likely&nbsp;will attack its former Soviet nation states&nbsp;in eastern Europe, then other countries in&nbsp;Europe and then perhaps even Canada via&nbsp;the rapidly thawing Arctic, and someday we&nbsp;just might be in Ukraine's position.<br />N.B. According to Oksana C. if any&nbsp;Canadian wants to send humanitarian&nbsp;aid to Ukraine, Meest Corporation Inc. is&nbsp;accepting a myriad of humanitarian aid supplies that they can deliver to Ukraine. All&nbsp;packages will be delivered into Lviv and&nbsp;dispersed to relevant Ukrainian relief organizations. For further information on items&nbsp;needed and restricted items not to send are&nbsp;available by emailing Meest at&nbsp;<a href="mailto:info.canada@meest.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">info.canada@meest.com</a>&nbsp;or by calling their customer&nbsp;service number at 1-800-361-7345. Supplies&nbsp;can also be dropped off at Meest's offices at&nbsp;250 Greenbank Road in Ottawa.</p>
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			<wp-post_id>12338</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2022-03-01 19:09:13</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2022-03-02 00:09:13</wp-post_date_gmt>
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