Articles referring to Chrystia Freeland In 1986, at age 17, Chrystia Freeland began her writing career with a Canadian government-funded summer job for a Ukrainian-Canadian publication in Edmonton called the The Encyclopedia of Ukraine. (It is published by the government-funded Canadian Institute for Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta. The university's chancellor when Freeland worked there was Peter Savaryn, a Ukrainian veteran of the Nazi's Waffen SS who received an Order of Canada.) Freeland's grandfather, Michael Chomiak, had also worked for this same Encyclopedia in the 1970s. Throughout WWII, Chomiak had been the leading Ukrainian-language news propagandist for Nazi Germany. The Encyclopedia of Ukraine was initiated, led and organized by Chomiak's wartime boss, Volodymyr Kubijovych. As president of the Nazi-funded Ukrainian Central Committee (based in the capital of occupied Poland), Kubijovych led all Ukrainian collaboration with the Third Reich. Kubijovych helped create the Ukrainian Waffen SS and Chomiak helped recruit for it in the newspapers he edited for the Nazis. Freeland and Chomiak also
both worked for another Ukrainian-Canadian publication in Edmonton,
Ukrainian News. Chomiak had written for this Ukrainian Catholic
newspaper for many years and was its editor before Freeland landed her job
there. After that Freeland wrote for other ethnonationalist-Ukrainian publications in Canada and the US before
doing work for Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). RFE/RL was created by
the CIA and funded by the Agency for decades. When Freeland worked
with them it had been privatised and was the media organ of George
Soros' Open Society Foundation.
After her remarkably rapid rise through the ranks of
the corporate media, Freeland was recruited by Justin Trudeau to run for the
Liberal party in 2013. Within a year, she was proud to be banned from
Russia. along with her friend Paul Grod, president of the krainian
Canadian Congress. She has served as Canada's Minister
of International Trade, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Minister of Finance, and Deputy Prime Minister.
Defunding the Myths and Cults of Cold War Canada: Here are som additional articles on Chrystia Freeland and the ethnonationalist Ukrainian influences on her worldview by her family and cultural community: The Chomiak-Freeland Connection (March 2017). |