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Montreal kicks off cruise season with ship sheltering 1,500 Ukrainian refugees – Winnipeg Free Press

MONTREAL – Cruise ship captain Rakesh Prasad cannot forget the traumatized looks on the faces of the hundreds of Ukrainians who boarded the Dutch American ship Volendam in April 2022.

Two months ago, 1,500 refugees who left their homeland after the Russian invasion and the war raging there boarded the ship with only a few belongings in plastic bags. The ship they boarded in the port of Rotterdam would be their home for the next six months.

“You looked at the children, you could feel how scared they were, there was no happiness,” Prasad said Saturday, standing next to Volendam's indoor pool after the ship docked in the port of Montreal.

Rens Van Erten, captain of the Volendam cruise ship, poses next to the ship in the Port of Montreal, Saturday, May 4, 2024.  2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes
Rens Van Erten, captain of the Volendam cruise ship, poses next to the ship in the Port of Montreal, Saturday, May 4, 2024. 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

Now bringing leisure travelers back to the ferry, Volendam was the first cruise ship to arrive in the city for the 2024 season. The Port Authority held a ceremony on the ship to mark the occasion, which included diplomats from Ukraine and the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

A few meters away from the pool area, at the entrance to the dining room, some of Volendam's crew hung a large frame with pictures of refugee children living on the ship in 2022. This art is now a permanent exhibit on the ship.

Ukraine's Honorary Consul in Montreal Yevgeny Tsoly looked at the ship's wood-paneled interior, pointed to a picture frame, and said the refugees were “received very kindly.” He thanked the Dutch authorities for their help.

The presence of refugees on board the ship Volendam turned the ship into a Ukrainian village.

“Families gave free haircuts, old women took care of children,” Prasad said. “It was a community, and when it came time to leave, most wanted to stay.”

Volendam captain Rens Van Eerten said the Netherlands has a long history of helping refugees flee violence, including helping the country flee the Nazis during World War II.

He said that shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Dutch government asked Holland, the owner of the Volendam, to charter a ship to America.

“We had one available,” he said. “We took (refugees) in and took care of them and made sure they lived a relatively normal life at the time.”

But while the Netherlands was eager to help in April 2022, the Honorary Consul of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Montreal lamented what he described as a feeling of “Ukraine fatigue” in some Western countries.

When the war broke out, Michael Polak said that everyone was “ready to help Ukraine fight Russian aggression.” But over the past six to 12 months, he said, “some allies have become a bit more reticent, questioning their commitment and not wanting to spend money.”

Rakesh Prasad, captain of the Volendam cruise ship, poses on board the ship in the Port of Montreal, Saturday, May 4, 2024.  in 2022.  THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes
Rakesh Prasad, captain of the Volendam cruise ship, poses on board the ship in the Port of Montreal, Saturday, May 4, 2024. in 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

“But this war continues and will not be resolved,” he said.