[citation needed] The association and its supporters have also placed two dozen trilingual markers and four statues across Canada,[9][11] in Ukraine[7][12] and in France[13] honouring the Ukrainian Canadian Victoria Cross recipient, Cpl Filip Konowal;[14] recalling the contributions of Ukrainian Canadian servicemen and women during the Second World War (London, England);[15][16] and honouring the Welsh journalist, Gareth Jones, reported on the famine of 1932–33.
[19] In 2010 UCCLA strove to ensure that all 12 galleries in the publicly funded Canadian Museum for Human Rights were thematic, comparative and inclusive – rather than elevating the suffering of any one or two communities above all others.
To that end the association distributed thousands of protest postcards nationally and published a notice raising their concerns in The Hill Times (31 January 2011).
Some of UCCLA's critics have tried to censure or even call for the silencing of its voice in the public debate over the proposed contents and governance of the tax payer funded Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
One of UCCLA's other recent campaigns (February 2016) involved an appeal to the then-Minister of Canadian Heritage, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, requesting her intervention to help save and re-consecrate the internment camp cemetery at Spirit Lake (La Ferme), Quebec.