Kinew Revokes High Honour Given To Nazi Supporter Ferdinand Eckhardt | CBC News

Manitoba

One of highest honours Manitoba bestows upon individuals has been posthumously stripped from the disgraced former director of the Winnipeg Art Gallery.

‘He has no place being honoured in the public sphere here in Manitoba,’ premier says

Darren Bernhardt · CBC News

· Posted: Jan 10, 2024 2:04 PM EST | Last Updated: 12 hours ago

Ferdinand Eckhardt was director of the Winnipeg Art Gallery from 1953 until 1974. (The Eckhardt-Gramatté Foundation)One of highest honours Manitoba bestows upon individuals has been posthumously stripped from the disgraced former director of the Winnipeg Art Gallery.

Premier Wab Kinew on Wednesday revoked the Order of the Buffalo Hunt from Ferdinand Eckhardt, who received it in 1982. He died in 1995.

Kinew drew a line through Eckhardt’s signature in the ledger of recipients to the award, established in 1957 to recognize individuals who have demonstrated outstanding skills in the areas of leadership, service and community commitment.

Eckhardt’s honour was granted “for outstanding service in the field of the arts in Manitoba.”

Ferdinand Eckhardt’s name is now crossed out of the registry of recipients to the Manitoba Order of the Buffalo Hunt. (Submitted by the Manitoba Government)The decision comes one day after CBC News asked the province if it intended to take action in light of recent allegations and research that shows Eckhardt was a Nazi supporter while living in Germany in the 1930s.

“This is a person who, to speak very frankly, pledged an oath of allegiance to Hitler and he has no place being honoured in the public sphere here in Manitoba. Once our team realized he had been in receipt of this honour, we took immediate action to revoke it,” Kinew said on Wednesday.

“The reason why I struck the name rather than grabbing the white out or a black marker, is because in a situation like this I think we have to show the utmost respect and reverence for Holocaust survivors and for everyone who is impacted by this terrible human tragedy.”

It’s important to “let the stain remain” rather than eliminate it, so people learn from the past, Kinew said

“Yes, there was a time this person was allowed to come to Canada and was celebrated in the past, and then there was a time where a reckoning took place and that injustice was corrected,” he said.

“So it’s my hope that future generations of Manitobans will know that this person was not deserving of being honoured in public here in Manitoba.”

The ledger that holds all of the names of recipients to the Manitoba Order of the Buffalo Hunt. (Submitted by the Manitoba Government)The Winnipeg Art Gallery said in a statement on its website last month that it is dropping Eckhardt’s name from its main entrance hall, website and all other gallery materials.

The University of Manitoba and University of Winnipeg both have facilities named in honour of Eckhardt’s wife, Sophie-Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté. The U of M also granted Eckhardt an honorary degree in 1971.

Both universities have said they are conducting reviews to determine next steps.

The U of M has already started covering the Eckhardt name on any signs or spaces until it decides what to do permanently.

A spokesperson for the University of Manitoba said it’s conducting a full review of the use of the Eckhardt name in its institution. In the meantime, anything that bears the name will be covered. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

A black cloth now covers part of the name at the University of Manitoba’s Eckhardt Gramatté Music Library. (Submitted by Abigail Bernhardt)

The Order of the Buffalo Hunt is awarded at the discretion of the premier, not through an order in council, so it is less formal, a provincial spokesperson said. Therefore, the process to revoke it is much simpler as well.

In addition to the ledger at the Manitoba legislative building, the list of recipients exists as a record on the Manitoba Historical Society’s website.

“We are waiting for the society’s webmaster to update the page,” the provincial spokesperson said.

“It will show a similar strike through of the name and a note it was revoked by Premier Kinew.”

In addition to dropping Eckhardt’s name, the Winnipeg Art Gallery is conducting research into the origins of materials donated by Eckhardt and the Eckhardt-Gramatté Foundation to ensure none of it was confiscated during the Nazi regime.

If that is discovered, “all efforts would be made to return it to the rightful owners or their heirs,” the statement says.

Eckhardt was also inducted into the Order of Canada in 1976, but his appointment ended when he died in 1995, a spokesperson for the Secretary to the Governor General’s office said in an email to CBC News.

“We deeply regret Mr. Eckhardt’s appointment to the Order of Canada in 1976, and sincerely apologize to those who were hurt by this appointment,” the spokesperson said.

The Order of Canada does not revoke a person’s appointment after they have died, according to its constitution. But the spokesperson said they are “examining ways to proactively acknowledge when the conduct of an individual recognized within all honours does not reflect shared Canadian values.”

“We recognize that some information might be brought to light after the appointment process is complete and we are committed to listening to Canadians and responding to this new information by implementing the Termination Policy when possible,” the spokesperson added.

A photo on the University of Winnipeg’s website, under the Eckhardt Gramatté Library, shows Ferdinand Eckhardt working at home in early 1990s. (Eckhardt Gramatté Library/University of Winnipeg)Eckhardt was born in Vienna in 1902 and conscripted into the German army, where he served from 1942 to 1944. He became an art historian and developed a division of art education for the Austrian government before moving to Canada in 1953 to become WAG director — a role he held until 1974.

His wife, Sophie-Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté, who came to Winnipeg with him, became one of Canada’s leading music composers.

Eckhardt’s connection to and support of Nazi Germany was reported in an article by Conrad Sweatman that was published in The Walrus last November. 

“Eckhardt’s public endorsements of Nazism include signing an oath of allegiance to Hitler and producing several polemics in far-right and Nazified journals in the early 1930s, urging, among other things, that Germany’s cultural arena align itself with the goals of the Nazi state,” the article says.

“Eckhardt went to work for one of the most notorious players in Hitler’s war machine, IG Farben, the same company that built the Auschwitz concentration camp and manufactured Zyklon B, used in the gas chambers,” Sweatman wrote.

WATCH / Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew explains why he crossed out Ferdinand Eckhardt’s name:

Revoking Manitoban honour for Ferdinand Eckhardt a lesson, Kinew saysManitoba Premier Wab Kinew explains why he crossed out Ferdinand Eckhardt’s name in the registry of Manitoba Order of the Buffalo Hunt recipients after learning of the former Winnipeg Art Gallery director’s Nazi ties.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Darren Bernhardt spent the first dozen years of his journalism career in newspapers, at the Regina Leader-Post then the Saskatoon StarPhoenix. He has been with CBC Manitoba since 2009 and specializes in offbeat and local history stories. He is the author of award-nominated and bestselling The Lesser Known: A History of Oddities from the Heart of the Continent.

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