This paper deals with deportations of Ruthenians during World War I by the Austro-Hungarian government that used civilian internment, confinement and evacuation to remove ‘suspicious’ persons from the area of operations of the Austro-Hungarian military. The cause of deportation was political suspicion that the Ruthenians would have connections to the Russian Empire. Deportations led to social disaster because many Ruthenian civilian internees died in the Thalerhof concentration camp, which marked the beginning of self-victimization of survivors and their descendants. This war crime became not only a place of remembrance but also, through the spread of the media, a sphere of conflict of political memory and historiography in Ukraine, Russia,...