Category Archives: canada

Manitoba welcome host for guest workers in Canada [Article]

From the Toronto Star:

Posting an article  I came across about the immigration booming towns in Manitoba:

THE WELCOME

The workers come from Latin America, Africa, China and Ukraine. Their biggest hurdle is English. The biggest shock for most is winter. Then there’s the fact that Brandon’s sidewalks seem forever rolled up.

“The first impression is this is not Europe,” says Sergii Smagytel, 35, who arrived from Ukraine in April 2008. “We were scared. Nobody walks on the sidewalk. It was very, very strange for us.”

Collins says each migrant worker costs Maple Leaf about $6,000. That includes recruitment, medical exams, permit application fees, one month’s rent, a month-long bus pass, free cafeteria food for a week, and a bed with linen and pillows.

Sergii Smagytel was a beekeeper in Ukraine. “We always knew at school about Canada, that it is a great country,” he says in English. He’s planning on buying a house and bringing over his wife and their two kids, 4 and 1.

“I came not because I wanted to,” he says. “I came for my children. I know that if they get an education in Canada, the whole world will be opened to them. I believe so.”

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Ukrainian cooking that’s tough to ‘beet’ [Article]

From the Vancouver Sun:

Cindy Lazarenko won’t take her heritage for granted, ever, ever again. That’s because serving the Ukrainian foods she grew up with has just landed the self-taught cook a top-10 national designation for her restaurant, Culina Highlands.

Air Canada’s enRoute magazine, the only magazine in Canada to publish a yearly review of the country’s best new restaurants, has just named Culina Highlands, 6509 112th Ave., one of the most inventive fresh entrants, coast-to-coast.

“I just feel so grateful, and I’m just happy for the guys here in the kitchen,” says Lazarenko of the award, announced Wednesday and to be featured in enRoute’s November issue. “We take Ukrainian food for granted, but we’re just revisiting everything and learning more about the food.”

The magazine gave Culina Highlands the prestigious nod, according to Toronto food writer Chris Nuttall-Smith, for the way Lazarenko and her cooks execute classic East European fare. During an anonymous visit to the restaurant, Nuttall-Smith writes that he was impressed by the kitchen’s use of typical Ukrainian ingredients such as beets–in particular, “a silky reduction of beet juice and local honey, which is drizzled over whipped goat cheese and poppyseed custard and crispy bread.”

Nuttall-Smith also noted Culina Highland’s lazy cabbage rolls with brown rice and kimchee, and the pork tenderloin served with nachynka (cornmeal).

The enRoute magazine is found on all Air Canada flights and, according to Nuttall-Smith(who is food editor of Toronto Life magazine), is one of the few Canadian publications that takes food journalism seriously.

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You can view the article here:

1 The kids share a bowl of Culina Highlands’ berry cobbler with Bourbon-vanilla ice cream. 2 Lyndon’s Borscht, served with sour cream and fresh dill at Culina Highlands.

Modern Ukrainian? This deeply charming Edmonton room (picture grandma’s farmhouse kitchen, but lit with Nelson bubble lamps), does it with a silky reduction of beet juice and local honey, which is drizzled over whipped goat cheese and poppyseed custard and crispy bread. Cindy Lazarenko, the young, self-taught chef, puts horseradish in her salad dressing and serves cabbage rolls “lazy,” which is to say that they’re not rolled so much as open-faced. The roasted local pork tenderloin is served with nachynka – cornmeal stuffing – and a healthy lashing of pan jus; dessert is apricot and walnut varenyky topped with vanilla ice cream. Ukrainian fare may have fuelled the settling of the Prairies, but it was ripe for such an inspired makeover. All but the Ukrainian vodka, of course, which is served straight-up with a slice of cucumber on the rim.

6509 112th Ave. N.W., Edmonton, 780-477-2422, culinafamily.ca

Good tickets still available for tomorrow’s Virsky Ukrainian National Dance Company in Toronto

Tomorrow night for one night only in Toronto the Virsky Ukrainian National Dance company performs at Roy Thomson Hall, and good seats are still available!

Named after Pavlo Virsky — who, with fellow Ukrainian ballet master Mykola Bolotov, brought together a group of folk dancers in 1937 — this magnificent artistic group is famous for its bright colors, the unity of content and form and the vivid embodiment of its stage concept. Each and every performance is a romantic, elevated, passionate and exciting show inundated in the folk tradition of humor and optimism. Virsky headed the ensemble from 1955 to 1975, guiding it to become a highly professional dance company whose diverse concert programs have been warmly received by audiences all over the world.

Myroslav Vantukh, Virsky’s disciple, has been in charge of the ensemble since 1980. An expert in folk traditions, his main objective, and continuing creative quest, is the careful preservation of folk choreographic art, as well as the development of new numbers to the repertoire such as “The Carpathians,” “The Tambourine Dance,” “The Young Years,” “In Peace and Harmo” and “The Russian Suite.”

One Shelby Township resident in particular is looking forward to the performance. From age 5 years old to 15, Yuliya Koval traveled an hour each way from her home in Kiev to the Virsky studio to attend its choreographic school for children, becoming a member of its children’s ensemble Barvinok. She recalls the discipline, the beautiful costumes, the pride in belonging to such an esteemed group and the choreography which she calls “the best of the east, central and western traditions.”

[The Daily Tribune]

You can also read all about Virsky’s recent tour of the US.

‘About memory, not money’: plaque laying at Edgewood by to remember WWI internees [Article]

From the Arrow Lakes News:

Ukrainian Canadians wrongfully interned during the First World War are being honoured this coming Saturday at a plaque laying in Edgewood at 11 a.m., where one of the 24 internment camps once found across Canada was set up by the federal government under the authority of the now-notorious War Measures Act.

“The first commemorative plaque we unveiled was at Fort Henry in Kingston, in 1994, fittingly given that was where Canada’s first permanent internment camp was established in the First World War,” said Dr. Lubomyr Luciuk

…

“Our twenty first plaque will be installed at Edgewood, then we hope to place the 22nd at Montreal, the 23rd in Lethbridge and finally the last one, our 24th, at The Citadel, in Halifax. We’re symbolically ending our campaign for recognition in a major port city where many immigrants arriving in this country first set foot.”

Dr. Luciuk will be in attendance at the plaque unveiling as will the Conservative MP for the Dauphin-Swan Lake-Marquette riding of Manitoba, Inky Mark, who drafted and helped ensure that Bills C-331(Internment of Persons of Ukrainian Origin Recognition Act) and Bill C-333 dealing with Chinese Canadian Head Tax issue, were addressed by Parliament. Members of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund’s endowment council will also be in attendance, as will Kootenay West MLA Katrine Conroy. “I’m looking forward to being in Edgewood on Oct. 14 and attending this unveiling. [I] am very happy to join with the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association, the Ukrainian Community of B.C. and the community of Edgewood in honour of this historical event,” says Conroy. “The presentation of this plaque will ensure that the contributions of the Ukrainian Canadians and other Europeans interned in such an unacceptable way are remembered.”

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