Saskatchewan
Vince Carter
yes
Nothing, they migrated to Canada because of the potato famine, and they had no belongings.
im not sure about usa or Canada but in Britain there was 400,000 German prisoners.
The Petitcodiac River in Canada is nicknamed the Chocolate River due to its brown tint.
Yves Bernard has written: 'Trop loin de Berlin' -- subject(s): Canada Prisoners and prisons, Concentration camps, Prisoners and prisons, Canada, Prisoners of war, World War, 1939-1945 'Guide des musiques du monde' -- subject(s): Music appreciation, Compact discs, Discography, Catalogues, World music
The prisoners' belongings were sorted by the SS, recycled and sold - partly to pay for the Holocaust itself. 'Belongings' meant absolutely everything! Even women's hair was sold for stuffing upholstered furniture in Germany. This was well known among the Germans, who thought (probably mistakenly) that their wartime soap was made from Jewish fat. (Sorry this sounds so awful, but there's no point in hiding what happened).
The living conditions of the POW camps in Canada were said to be very good. The camps were in better condition than the army barracks. Canada has had more than 33,798 prisoners of war.
The laws of Canada at that time allowed "people" living in Canada to vote, but the legal definition of "people" excluded children (under age 21), mental patients, jailed prisoners, and women.
Germany and Canada. it was a very brief but fierce battle wich marked the end of the fighting in the adriatic front in Italy and was nicknamed bloody December.
Not in the United States, Canada, or the UK. I don't know of any such law existing in other countries in modern times.