On the battlefields of Europe, nearly 4,000 Canadian soldiers were captured and marched into German prison camps. Their diaries describe starvation, forced labour, and the psychological weight of uncertainty. One POW wrote that “one moment we were fighting, the next we were herded like cattle,” while another recalled that “we were not men in that car. We were cargo.” These firsthand accounts illuminate a side of the war often overshadowed by stories of heroism at the front.
But while Canadian soldiers endured captivity overseas, a very different — and far less acknowledged — system of confinement was unfolding at home.

Between 1914 and 1920, Canada operated 24 internment camps that imprisoned more than 8,500 civilians, many of them Ukrainian, German, Serbian, and other immigrants who had committed no crime. Under the sweeping powers of the War Measures Act, they were labelled “enemy aliens,” stripped of rights, and forced into labour that helped build parts of Canada’s national parks and infrastructure. As one internee later wrote, “We were not soldiers, yet we lived behind barbed wire.”
This episode traces both stories — the soldiers captured in battle and the civilians imprisoned by their adopted country — revealing a complex portrait of fear, resilience, injustice, and the human cost of wartime suspicion. From escape attempts and survival strategies to family separations and the long shadows these camps left behind, Episode 19 challenges the way we remember Canada’s role in the Great War.
If you’re drawn to history that goes beyond the battlefield and into the lived experiences of those caught in its wake, this is an episode that stays with you.

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