[Jubilee Committee of the Sts. Vladimir & Olga Cathedral of the Ukrainian Catholic Church]; Reverend Monsignor Dr. Wasyl Kushnir (1893 - 1979)
[Programme Book] in Honour of the 75th Birthday of Reverend Monsignor Dr. Wasyl Kushnir ; Parish Priest of Sts. Vladimir & Olga Cathedral of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, [being held on] Saturday, November 16th, 1968
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Sts. Vladimir & Olga Cathedral of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, 1968. First Edition, First Printing. Stapled Wraps. Unpaginated [pp.3]. 8vo. measuring 6" x 5.5". Illustrated, twice-stapled, self-wrappers. Black-and-white photographic frontispiece of the subject. Comprises a complete order of events held in honour of, and commemorating the 75th birthday of the Ukrainian-Canadian religion leader, complete with details of speakers, hosts, and a concise, though, thorough, biography of the Monsignor. Light foxing to the front cover, contents without blemish with firm, stapled binding. Unrecorded in OCLC. Not found in Peel, BAC/LAC, University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections, et al. Text in Ukrainian. Born in Vikno, West Ukraine on 17 September 1893, he completed his high school education in Tarnopil and Lviv. After the First World War he studied theology at the Theological Seminary in Lviv and at the Catholic University in Innsbruck, Austria from which he received a doctorate in divinity in 1929. From 1930 to 1934, he taught at the Theological Seminary at Stanislaviv, Ukraine. He came to Canada in May 1934 and became a Ukrainian Catholic priest at Winnipeg. From 1947 to 1951, the Cathedral of Saints Vladimir and Olga was built under his leadership. In 1951, he was elevated to the position of Domestic Prelate by Pope Pius XII. In 1968, he was named Mitred priest by Patriarch Yosyf Slipyj, Archbishop Major of the Ukrainian Catholic Church. An outspoken anti-communist, in 1945 he led a delegation to the inaugural meeting of the United Nations in San Francisco, California to challenge the right of the Ukrainian Soviet to represent Ukrainians. He was one of the founders of the Ukrainian Canadian Committee, serving as its president from 1940 to 1953 and 1957 to 1972. He was founder and president of the Pan-American Ukrainian Conference, and he initiated and chaired the first World Congress of Free Ukrainians, serving as the president of its Executive Board from 1968 to 1969 and from 1973 to 1978. He received the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal (1953), the Canadian Centennial Medal (1967), and the Order of Canada (1972). In recognition of his service to the Ukrainian Canadian community, he was awarded the Taras Shevchenko medal in 1961. He died at Winnipeg on 25 September 1979." [Source: Sts. Valdimir & Olga Cathedral Ukrainian Catholic Church).
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Keywords: local history; canadian history; ephemera; winnipeg history; ukrainian canadian history; ukrainian catholic church; religion; slavic studies