![Relatives of First World War-era internees seek redress from B.C. government](https://globalnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/DUCIVA-bc-redress-THUMB.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&w=720&h=379&crop=1)
Relatives of First World War-era internees seek redress from B.C. government
Global News
There was a cluster of camps in British Columbia's Interior including a facility in Vernon that operated from 1914 to 1920.
Vernon, B.C. artist Michelle Loughery only found out as an adult about her family’s internment history.
“It was very emotional because it is how we understood why there was so much generational trauma and shame,” said Loughery.
Her great-grandfather and a great-uncle had been interned along with thousands of other Canadian residents of Ukrainian and Eastern European ancestry.
The internees were unfairly labelled “enemy aliens” during and after the First World War and sent to internment camps.
There was a cluster of camps in the B.C. Interior including a facility in Vernon that operated from 1914 to 1920.
Loughery is now part of a group called Descendants of Ukrainian Canadian Victims Association seeking redress from the provincial government for what happened during the internment operations. They are pushing for both recognition and money to create a museum to educate people on the history.
Money for a museum would also be meaningful to Anne Sadelain. Her father was interned in three B.C. camps, including Vernon, from 1915-1920.
“These people, a lot of them, didn’t understand what they were doing there,” said Sadelain.