Documents shed light on Canada's 'shameful history'
Toronto Star|February 03, 2024
Newly released report reveals politics trumped legal advice in decision not to revoke Nazi's citizenship in 1967
MIA RABSON
Documents shed light on Canada's 'shameful history'

OTTAWA Newly declassified pages from a 40-year-old report on Canada’s handling of Nazi war criminals suggest both the author and Canadian bureaucrats felt politics, and not legal arguments, were driving decisions around a man convicted of Nazi war crimes in the Soviet Union.

The 1967 decision not to extradite the man or revoke his citizenship was based heavily on advice from former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, who was justice minister at the time.

The then-minister of external affairs asked Trudeau for advice on whether he should attempt to revoke the citizenship of a man known in the documents only as “Subject F.”

Until this week, that advice had been deleted from publicly available versions of historian Alti Rodal’s report, written to help inform the work of the 1985 Commission of Inquiry on War Criminals in Canada. The current federal government, under pressure from Canadian Jewish groups, released 15 additional pages from that report Thursday.

B’nai Brith Canada and other organizations have lobbied for the full report to be released for several decades. The request took on new life last fall after parliamentarians inadvertently applauded a man in the House of Commons who was later identified as having fought for a Nazi unit in Ukraine.

The Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center and B’nai Brith both welcomed the newly released pages.

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