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See the Ukrainian pavilion at Carassauga 2009 this weekend

Looking for this year’s Carassauga post?
Update: I’ve added some pictures from the event

Each year Mississauga, Ontario has it’s Carassauga weekend festival which features a Ukrainian pavilion packed with many different artists. This year it will be held today, tomorrow and Sunday at Dormition of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church (St. Mary’s) – 3265 Cawthra Road, Mississauga, ON. Mississauga Transit is providing free transit and shuttle bus services.

Here’s the itinerary:

Continue reading See the Ukrainian pavilion at Carassauga 2009 this weekend

Deported (Ukrainian) deacon ‘needed’ here

Sorry it’s a little late, but I think this deserves some attention:

Members of the Ukrainian community are working to have returned to Canada a popular church deacon who was deported after overstaying his visitor’s visa.

Stepan Lylak, 55, was removed to the Ukraine a year ago after serving here for 10 years mostly at churches in Toronto. His last posting was at the Holy Protection of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church in Guelph.

Lylak, a cantor and church volunteer, was granted a new hearing on humanitarian and compassionate grounds by federal court last week.

He is not coping well,” Lylak’s lawyer, Joseph Young, said yesterday. “There are no jobs and very little for him to do in the Ukraine.”

Lylak’s case will be expedited and if there are no setbacks he should be able to return to Canada in months, Young said.

Read more

CS Monitor gets it right – it’s Kyiv, not Kiev!

It took almost 20 years, but the Christian Science Monitor has finally agreed to go with Kyiv when writing about Ukraine’s capital – and does a really good job explaining why:

But the swapping of a single letter in this case has political echoes and underscores an increasingly fractious divide between ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who live together in the same country.

The Russian spelling is Kiev. Ukrainians prefer Kyiv. Shortly after the country gained independence in 1991, it asked the rest of the world to go with the Y spelling. The US State Department (and the CIA), along with the United Nations, among others, have adopted the change. Most Western news organizations have not.

The issue is fairly sensitive. Many Ukrainians have lingering bad memories of the times when their lives were controlled by Moscow (the Monitor recently explored this here). That’s one reason why Ukrainians bristle a bit when Westerners describe their country as “the” Ukraine, as if it were still a territory. Kyiv/Kiev is a bit more subtle of a difference, but it’s rooted in the same desire by Ukrainians to be recognized as an independent country with a language and culture that are similar, but not identical, to Russia’s.

We applaud Christian Science Monitor’s efforts to use the correct spelling and while it will continue to add the Russian spelling in paranthesis’ the publication made the change due to reader feedback – viewers like you! It goes to show you that we can make headway correcting these newspapers, it only takes one click to their ‘Contact us’ page.

The last secret of WW2: Operation Keelhaul – Betrayal of the Cossacks in Lienz

From Surviving Lienz:

A little-known story of betrayal and treachery during Operation Keelhaul at the end of WWII will be revealed to Canadians by Professor Doctor Harald Stadler and author Anthony Schlega. They will be visiting several Canadian cities from May 4–16, 2009 to raise awareness of this shameful historical event, and funds for a memorial at the site of the massacre in Lienz, Austria.

Sunday, May 10 – 6pm Holy at Trinity Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral in Winnipeg, MB

Monday, May 11 – 6pm at Mohyla Institute in Saskatoon, SK

Friday, May 15 – 6pm at Ukrainian Orthodox Church of St. Elia in Edmonton

A little background:

The Lienz Cossacks were ‘white Russians’ who’d fought bitterly against communism and the rise of the Soviet Union following the Russian Revolution. During the Second World War, when Germany invaded the Soviet Union, the Lienz Cossacks sided with the Nazis in order to try the topple the communist regime and bring ‘freedom’ to their country.

The Lienz Cossacks who’d fought with the Germans were rounded up by the British. It was up to the United Kingdom to decide what to do with them.

Continue reading The last secret of WW2: Operation Keelhaul – Betrayal of the Cossacks in Lienz