“From 1931 to 1934 we had great harvests. The weather conditions were great. However, all the grain was taken from us. People searched the fields for mice burrows hoping to find measly amounts of grain stored by mice…”
(as remembered by Mykola Karlosh)
“I’m asking for your permission to advance me any amount of grain. I’m completely sick. I don’t have any food. I’ve started to swell up and I can hardly move my feet. Please don’t refuse me or it will be too late.”
(From a petition to the authorities by P. Lube)
This was the first instance of a peacetime genocide in history. It took the extraordinary form of an artificial famine deliberately created by the ruling powers. This savage combination of words for the designation of a crime — “an artificial, deliberately planned famine” — is still incredible to many people throughout the world, but indicates the uniqueness of the tragedy of 1933, which is unparalleled, for a time of peace, in the number of victims it claimed.
- Wasyl Hryshko, survivor of the Holodomor. Hryshko, Wasyl. The Ukrainian Holocaust of 1933. Toronto: Bahriany Foundation, Suzhero, Dobrus, 1983, 107


The testimonies they cite are from the 1980s, when anticommunist propaganda was rife and scholarship on this was full of assumptions and extrapolations from biased accounts. Also as another person here pointed out, the source is a publication by Ukrainian nationalists in Canada (of course)
Toronto had (has?) an anti-communist Ukrainian vs communist Ukrainian war going on for nearly 100 years
Post war vs pre war Ukrainians. The Labour Hall bombing was just one example. They were used as strike breakers in Sudbury during the INCO strikes, which had that divide as well.