Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

PM Harpers's Mailbox Brims With Angry Missives About Anti-communism Memorial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Oct, 2015 10:52 AM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper's mailbox is filling up with messages from Canadians upset about the concept, size, location and cost of a national memorial for victims of communism, newly released correspondence shows.
     
    The prime minister has received dozens of handwritten letters, typewritten notes and emails from people — including Conservative supporters — who question the idea of a such a monument, especially just a stone's throw from the Supreme Court of Canada.
     
    A few people backed the project, though two of them argued it should be built elsewhere.
     
    "With all the calamities happening around the world, such a memorial is hypocritical and short-sighted," wrote one opponent. "A memorial ought to encompass all victims of human tragedies and incite global leaders to respect their nations and countrymen. Otherwise, don't bother."
     
    Some correspondents were more blunt.
     
    "What an absurd project," wrote one.
     
    "This is outrageous! Stop this waste of my money now," said another.
     
    The Canadian Press obtained the letters and emails to the prime minister through an Access to Information request that covered correspondence from Jan. 1, 2014, through late June of this year. Some missives are still being processed for release.
     
    The names of almost all of the individuals and groups who wrote to Harper were withheld to protect their privacy. Other records were excluded from disclosure because they constituted briefings to cabinet.
     
    The Conservative government has promoted the planned memorial as a means of recognizing the many millions who died or suffered under communist regimes. The government is managing the project on behalf of Tribute to Liberty, a charity established in 2008.
     
    The concept by Toronto-based ABSTRAKT Studio Architecture features a series of angular peaks, or "memory folds," with more than 100 million pixel-like "memory squares" — each representing a person — covering the exterior face of the folds. It also includes a Bridge of Hope and elevated viewing platform.
     
    The $5.5-million project — to be built with federal and private funds — has drawn objections over its imposing design and planned location on a grassy square in the parliamentary precinct long set aside for a new Federal Court building.
     
    The monument, originally intended to be the height of three city buses, was scaled back considerably in June, partly in response to a federal advisory panel's concerns. A final design is expected later this year.
     
    "It would be more appropriate to build a monument to the victims of your heartless, ideological government," one concerned person wrote the day the latest design was unveiled.
     
    But even supporters were irked. "I suggest that this entire initiative be reconsidered. Should it go ahead, I will have to reconsider my donation level," an email warned.
     
    The original size of the planned memorial and its proximity to the National War Memorial — a few blocks away — is "insulting to the sacrifices and memory" of family members who served in the two World Wars, wrote another.
     
    Said a "disgusted" correspondent last March: "This monstrosity of a memorial is to be placed on prime land that it was never meant to be on."
     
    Several people suggested it would be more appropriate to commemorate the suffering of aboriginal peoples — or improve the standard of living in Canada's indigenous communities.
     
    One email message recommended "using whatever money is available, some millions I assume, to ensure that all our First Nations communities have properly functioning water and sewer systems, or housing with proper heating and insulation." 
     
    A number felt there was insufficient public input on the memorial.
     
    Wrote one: "The decision, taken without consulting Canadians in a truly democratic way, and against the wishes of many, is most regrettable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner

    Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner
    The BC Coroners Service says three men who died when their fishing boat sank off British Columbia's coast lived on central Vancouver Island.

    Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner

    ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:

    ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:
     A new report suggests the number of Canadians who visited hospital emergency rooms for anaphylaxis doubled in the last seven years.

    ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics
    Days before Toronto must decide whether to bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, critics are sounding the alarm over what they call unprecedented secrecy surrounding the process.

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids
    Lawyers for British Columbia's Criminal Justice Branch are in court this afternoon applying to have child killer Allan Schoenborn declared a "high-risk accused."

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls
    Sonia Singh, from Tasmania's capital Hobart, has won the Etsy Design Award for her project "Tree Change Dolls" by beating 52 other finalists selected by a panel 

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder
    Neil Snelson was found guilty in June of manslaughter for the killing of 19-year-old Jennifer Cusworth, who was beaten to death after leaving a Kelowna house party where the pair met.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder