Category Archives: canada

Cirque du Soleil performer dies of head injuries

From CBC:

A Cirque du Soleil performer has died in a Montreal hospital after suffering head injuries when he fell off a trampoline while training Friday.

The Cirque issued a statement Saturday saying Oleksandr Zhurov, a Ukrainian in his 20s, had died. The accident happened during a regular training session at a Montreal facility where the international troupe rehearses for shows.

“Sacha was part of the extended Cirque family for the few months he was among us,” he said. “An incident like this reminds us of the courage and determination displayed by our artists each and every day. They are exceptional human beings who share their talents with great generosity.”

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Our deepest condolences go out to his family.

Yarmarok 2009 announced at St. Mary’s in Mississauga (Updated)

Check out photos from this years event!

A reader sent in that this year’s Yarmarok at St. Mary’s Dormition Ukrainian Catholic Church in Mississauga, ON will be happening on November 14th and 15th. More details to come.

You can view pictures from last year’s event.

Update: Here’s this year’s flyer: Continue reading Yarmarok 2009 announced at St. Mary’s in Mississauga (Updated)

Ukrainian festival’s variety show to help raise funds for local Steelworkers

From Sudbury Northern Life:

Yarmarok Festival celebrates 35th year

Steelworkers Local 6500 will get support from members of the Ukrainian community this Saturday evening, Oct. 17.

Ukrainian artists, Chinese Heritage dancers, Irish Heritage dancers and Sudbury dance troupes will be performing at variety show this Saturday, beginning at 6 p.m., as part of the annual Yarmarok Festival held by the Ukrainian National Federation. It is being held at the hall at 130 Frood Road.

“This variety night is being done as a fundraiser for the United Steelworkers Local 6500 Strike fund. Admission is free but donations will be taken at the door,” said festival chair Keri Shewchuk.

“We have a lot of our members affected by the strike at our hall. We feel it is an obligation to help our our members and others as well.”

She said Ukrainians have a long history of working in the mines in Sudbury and the surrounding area.

“Every since Inco started, Ukrainians have been here working. My grandfather worked in the mines and he retired in 1983. He started when he was quite young.”

The annual Ukrainian Yarmarok Festival runs from Oct. 16-18.  All events are held at the Ukrainian National Federation Hall. Events during the day are free, said organizers.

Members of the Ukrainian Senior Centre is holding their own festival kick-off, Wednesday Oct. 14 at 6 p.m., at the Ukrainian Senior Centre, 30 Notre Dame. The Veselka School of Ukrainian Dance will be performing.

The official start of the festival is Friday evening, with a gala dinner, at 6:30 pm. Music will be by Zabava, and tickets are $35. For tickets, phone 673-7404.

A food fair will take place from noon until 6 p.m., Saturday and Sunday. Vendors will be on site to sell traditional Ukrainian foods.

For more information, phone 673-0890, or visit www.sudburyyarmarok.com.

The newspaper site also has some video and photos of the food preparation:

Elizabeth Bachinsky gets in touch with the darker side of her Ukrainian heritage in her latest book (Updated)

From Uptown Magazine (Winnipeg):

Vancouver-based poet Elizabeth Bachinsky got in touch with her Ukrainian heritage with her new book, God of Missed Connections (Nightwood Editions).

“I’m third generation Vancouver and we’re pretty closed off from that culture,” she says.

“It’s a really good vantage point,” she adds. “I never tried the superficial stuff like dancing or food. That’s the stuff I wanted to get past. You have to take those kitschy qualities and transform them. It’s about taking Ukrainian culture into the post-modern. It’s hard to do but not impossible.

“Ukrainians are deadly sexy.”
The poems cover Bachinsky’s family history and Stephen Leacock’s casual racism, Canadian internment camps and forced starvation in the old country. The Bread Basket of Europe gives new, terrifying meaning to a cliché I often heard growing up. She makes poignant use of the word Holodomor (or “murder by hunger,” referring to the millions who staved to death under Stalin).

“I get corrected all the time after readings,” she says. “I like to be corrected. It means to me that things aren’t getting through the way they should. It’s the nuances that get missed, not the big historical facts. Which are the story, but not the whole story.”

Buy the book from Amazon

Update: I found an interview with her done from Agora:

EB: I wanted to write the book I couldn’t find. When I began this project I found it fascinating how many (hundreds!) of academic texts, memoirs, interviews, short stories, poems, documentary films, videos, paintings, collages, sculptures, websites, blogs, etc. are dedicated to the history of Ukraine and of Ukrainians in Canada—yet very few of these resources are produced by Ukrainian-Canadian authors of my generation. And almost none of these are creative works. I practically fell over when I found work by Lisa Grekul whose first novel Kalyna’s Song (Coteau, 2003) is the coming-of-age story of a third-generation Ukrainian Canadian girl who grows up in northeastern Alberta and southern Africa. I also took a lot of interest in a website called Poetry International Web where you can read poetry in translation by Ukrainian poets born between 1954-1974. I was particularly impressed with poems by Andriy Bondar, Halyna Krouk, Yuri Andrukhovych…all the Ukrainian poets you’ll find on that website, actually. It seemed to me that my poetry was often in conversation with those young poets in Ukraine. And Lisa Grekul’s fantastic book of essays, Leaving Shadows, gave valuable context for my work here in Canada.

It is important to say, I think, that I wrote God of Missed Connections from a place of ignorance. I had never, for example, heard of Holodomor or the internment operations during the First World War that saw between five and six thousand Ukrainian Canadians imprisoned. And I’m not ashamed to say I was ignorant. Ignorance is the resource that made me seek out the works of Myrna Kostash, Helen Potrebenko, Andy Suknaski, Natalka Hussar, and countless others. But, of course, in the act of inquiry there is always the problem of selectivity. Robert N. Proctor writes in his book Agnotology: the Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (Stanford University Press, 2008):

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Ignatieff promotes sacked MPs including Borys amid sinking popularity

Things haven’t been looking so good lately for Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff:

Michael Ignatieff’s leadership woes worsened Thursday, after some Liberal senators effectively gutted law-and-order legislation that the Liberal Leader had supported and the Senate adjourned for a week before the problem could be fixed.

Mr. Ignatieff is paying the political cost of a disunited caucus and plunging poll numbers. He desperately needs to change a public perception that, fairly or not, portrays him as an ineffective leader who cannot even control his own MPs.

To help heal a splitting party, Ignatieff has been promoting Toronto MPs. One of those is Borys Wrzesnewskyj, whom Ignatieff removed from his shuffle cabinet only earlier this year. Wrzesnewskyj is now the Special Advisor for Emerging Democracies:

"I am truly honoured that the leader has given me the tremendous responsibility of serving as Special Advisor for Emerging Democracies. I was privileged not only to bear witness, but to take an active part in the processes that saw the flowering of democracies in former Warsaw Pact countries and in former Soviet Republics," said Mr. Wrzesnewskyj

.“As I personally witnessed in Georgia during the civil war in 1994, these transitions were often difficult, but many countries that were part of the Soviet Block have emerged from totalitarianism into fragile but promising democracies."