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Canada-Ukraine Parliamentary Program at 30

Apr 8, 2020 | Featured

Artem Barabash for New Pathway – Ukrainian News.

End of colonial existence

Dramatic changes that began with the collapse of the Soviet regime provided Ukrainians with a chance to re-establish their statehood. On July 16th, 1990, the Ukrainian SSR Parliament passed the Declaration of Sovereignty proclaiming the need to build the Ukrainian state based on the rule of law. On August 24th, 1991, the same parliament adopted the Declaration of Independence, which was subsequently supported by Ukrainian citizens at the referendum as of December 1st, 1991. The modern era Independence Day in Ukraine is celebrated on 24th August.

After prolonged Russian occupation, Ukrainians received the opportunity to govern their own state. However, Ukraine suffered from lack of talents to share and promote western democratic values. The ruling political establishment was made up mainly of former members of the Communist Party and needed to be replaced by a generation of bright, intelligent and determined Ukrainians motivated to implement best democratic practices in all areas of social life.

Early stage of the internship program

Understanding the need to generate such talents, Ukrainian Canadians proposed several ideas, including establishment of a university based on the Canadian model, as well as a parliamentary internship program between Canada and Ukraine. Among the various projects, only the latter was destined to be implemented. However, there must have been a particular occasion to initiate this program.

Centennial Celebrations in Canada

In 1991, Canadians celebrated the Centennial of Ukrainian group immigration to Canada. To mark the event, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, with the assistance of the Canadian Government of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney established the Ukrainian Canadian Centennial Commission (the UCCC). The UCCC was given the mandate, with a budget of 1.5 million dollars, to promote the centennial celebrations with projects of significant and lasting value. At that time, Ihor Bardyn, a lawyer from Toronto, was appointed as the Vice-President of the UCCC. He was also the President of the Chair of Ukrainian Studies Foundation at the University of Toronto and would later become the director of the internship program between Canada and Ukraine, known today as the Canada-Ukraine Parliamentary Program (the CUPP).

As its Centennial project, the Ukrainian Studies Foundation at the University of Toronto marked the Centennial by establishing a parliamentary internship program for university students from Ukraine. Although the UCCC approved the idea of an internship program, the initiative was not supported with any funding. Convinced that a parliamentary internship program would benefit both countries, Ihor Bardyn embarked on fundraising for the program from the Ukrainian community in Canada. At the same time, to get approval for an internship program, he lobbied the Speaker of the House of Commons John Fraser, and Ivan Pliushch Speaker of the Ukrainian Parliament. For him, this was an opportunity of a lifetime to assist his ancestral homeland and build bridges between Canada and Ukraine in order to share western democratic governance.

Idea for the CUPP

The idea for a student internship program began to take shape during Ihor Bardyn’s visits to Ukraine in 1990 and 1991 on behalf of Amnesty International in support of imprisoned MP Stepan Khmara. During the visits, he met and discussed his proposal for the internship program with Ukrainian MPs, who were members of the Communist Party, with members of the Rukh (the People’s Movement of Ukraine), and with leading governmental and judicial officials. Communicating with representatives of the Ukrainian establishment, Ihor Bardyn realised that few if any understood or knew know how western democracy and civil society work. In the Soviet system being the only system they knew, decisions came down from above and were executed without much discussion. Ukrainian teachers and professors were unable to fix this problem being themselves educated under the corrupt Soviet system.

Approval for the CUPP

Ihor Bardyn recalled that approval for the program in both the Ukrainian and Canadian parliaments came relatively easy. Ivan Pliushch, the Speaker of the Ukrainian parliament, was persuaded that the internship would benefit both countries. At the same time, a number of ministers of the Canadian government supported Ihor Bardyn to get permission from John Fraser, the Speaker of the House of Commons, to allow Ukrainian students security access to work at the Canadian parliament. At that time, only interns from Canada, USA and NATO countries had access to the Canadian Parliament.

Arrival of first interns

Originally known as the Centennial Parliamentary Internship Program, the CUPP began in 1991 with the arrival of three university students from Kyiv and Lviv. Funding for the program had been provided substantially by eight Canadian families. The first and most significant donation was from the Mazurenko Family of Toronto. Danylo Mazurenko had been Ihor Bardyn’s client and a devoted Ukrainian patriot. Though there was not yet a complete blueprint for the program, Danylo understood and believed that what Ihor Bardyn outlined to him would be an important building block once Ukraine emerged as an independent state. Before his death in 1990, Danylo Mazurenko designated a quarter of a million dollars for the project. This generous gift was placed into the endowment fund with Toronto’s Ukrainian Credit Unions and together with seven additional substantial donations formed a one-million-dollar permanent fund from which the interest would be used to fund the CUPP.

The first Interns

The first three Ukrainian students came from the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy and Ivan Franko University of Lviv. The Canadian MPs who welcomed the Ukrainians to the House of Commons were Alan Redway, Progressive Conservative from Toronto; Jesse Flis, Liberal from Toronto; and Dr. Chris Axworthy, the New Democratic Party from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Everything was “for the first time” for three Ukrainian interns: Canada, Canadians, the Diaspora, Parliament and the cities of Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto. After the end of the first internship program, the Canadian MPs unanimously pronounced it a success and urged Bardyn to continue the program.

The CUPP in the following decades

In the succeeding years, the CUPP program grew rapidly. In some years, there were Spring and Fall Programs to correspond with the Spring and Fall sitting of Parliament. In the late 1990s, the number of applicants from Ukraine reached over 7,000 per year, but the CUPP could accept a maximum of only 52 students per year.

Newsletter

In 1994, the interns began to publish their own Newsletter, which in the last decade has turned out a publication of between 60 to 90 pages, filled with interviews and articles.

Support for the CUPP

The CUPP’s success would not have been possible without the help of Lucy Hicks, Alexander & Irene Hordienko, Bohdan Bardyn, and Vasyl Kereliuk in organizational matters over the years. Walter Tarnopolsky, John Sopinka, and Ray Hnatyshyn also provided a considerable input into the CUPP’s development.

The most loyal supporter of the CUPP has been Senator Raynell Andreychuk from Saskatchewan. She retired in 2019 and the CUPP lost a very valuable Ukrainian-Canadian friend on Parliament Hill.

There were other loyal supporters for the program, such as Stephanie Hlynka widow of Antin Hlynka, a Member of the Canadian Parliament from 1940 to 1949, Robert Magocsi, holder of the Ukrainian Chair at the University of Toronto, Bohdan Vitvitsky, Volodymyr Stretovych Member of Verkhovna Rada, John Yaremko, former Cabinet Minister in the Ontario Government, supported the program with sound advice. Supreme Court Judge John Sopinka organized mock trials with the Ukrainian interns to introduce them to the common and Paul Migus held seminars to introduce the interns to the Canadian political system.

Financing for the CUPP

Financial support for the CUPP came from Danylo Mazurenko, Anna Mazurenko, Ivan Mazurenko, the Malanchuk Family, the Atamanchuk Family, Wolodymyr Hrynyk, Ivan Bodnarchuk, the Halushka Family, Josef & Maria Siecinsky, Emil Telizyn, John & Julia Stashuk, the Fedyna Family, Stefan & Roma Franko, Alexandra & Eugene Sukniarsky, the Obal Family, the Bardyn Family, William & Antonina Bazylewych, Dr. Roman Humeniuk, Jerry Humeniuk, James Temerty, Dr. Taras Fecycz, Natalia Bundza, and two Canadian and USA Educational foundations.

Presence of Ukraine’s Best and Brightest

CUPP interns have made their presence felt during their time on Parliament Hill by organizing the Ukrainian Day on Parliament Hill, the Prayer for Peace in Ukraine (inter-faith service), informational meetings for MPs and Senators, attending Standing Committee Hearings and interacting daily with MPs and their staff. The CUPP’s annual reception at the Ukrainian Embassy is attended by Government leaders, MPs and Senators and provides interns with an opportunity to network with Embassy officials and Canadian leaders.

During the CUPP’s twenty-nine years, the interns have gained a reputation of proactive and enthusiastic specialists able to act immediately to support any pro-Ukraine initiative with their own input. The Ukrainian-Canadian community could not ask for better lobbyists than the bright university students who, while in Parliament, interact with MPs, executive assistants, leaders of Parties and the Prime Minister’s Office.

Importance of the CUPP

After 30 years, the importance of the CUPP for Ukraine’s future is obvious. The program has graduated the cohort of leaders who are shaping Ukraine today. Andriy Pyvovarskyi and Volodymyr Omelyan (CUPP 1998) have served as Ministers of Infrastructure just recently, Anna Novosad (CUPP 2013) was named Minister of Education and Science. Markian Malskyy (CUPP 2004) was recently appointed the Head of the Lviv Regional State Administration. Oleksiy Soshenko (CUPP 1995) became one of the most prominent lawyers in Ukraine’s banking and finance sector. Alona Shkrum (CUPP 2013), Solomia Bobrovska (CUPP 2010), Roman Lozynskyi (CUPP 2016) and Rustem Umerov (CUPP 2003) were elected as MPs to the Verkhovna Rada in 2019. Serhiy Petukhov (CUPP 2005) has served as the Deputy Minister of Justice, Natalka Mykolska (CUPP 2000) has served as the Deputy Minister of Economy. Viktor Dovhan (CUPP 2000) is serving as the Deputy Minister of Infrastructure, Elena Shyshkina (CUPP 2003) served as the MP in previous years.

What’s Next for the CUPP

With Ukraine’s path to further integration into the community of rule of law countries, it is expected that even more former CUPP interns may get an opportunity to participate in the decision-making process in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s contemporary history demonstrates that democracy takes time. Through education of a new generation of leaders, Ukraine will produce talents that can assume the stewardship of government and govern for interests of the people and the state. In this context, the CUPP gives Ukrainian students a unique opportunity to work and study in the Canadian Parliament allowing them to gain experience from which generations of Canadian, American and West European students had benefited. Indeed, the Ukrainian youth should know and learn first-hand – not from a manual or a one-week seminar – democratic governance, as practiced in the West. They ought to understand the importance of democratic institutions and principles of free society, such as inviolability of private property, freedom of speech and due process. They need to defend the impartial police force and the independent judiciary. They must learn lessons of over eight centuries of evolution in legal and political tradition.

The CUPP has sent back to Ukraine a small group of devoted supporters of Canadian democracy. But Ukraine needs more. Canada can provide such talents through the continuation of the CUPP.

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