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Wikipedia

Ukrainian Canadians

Ukrainian Canadians [N 1] are Canadian citizens of Ukrainian descent or Ukrainian-born people who immigrated to Canada. In 2016, there were an estimated 1,359,655 persons of full or partial Ukrainian origin residing in Canada (the majority being Canadian-born citizens), making them Canada's eleventh largest ethnic group[1] and giving Canada the world's third-largest Ukrainian population behind Ukraine itself and Russia. Self-identified Ukrainians are the plurality in several rural areas of Western Canada.[3] According to the 2011 census, of the 1,251,170 who identified as Ukrainian, only 144,260 (or 11.5%) could speak the Ukrainian language (including the Canadian Ukrainian dialect).[4]

Ukrainian Canadians
Canadiens d'origine ukrainienne
Українські канадці
Ukrainian Canadians as percent of population by province & territory
Total population
1,359,655 (by ancestry, 2016 Census)[1]
Regions with significant populations
West922,050 (8.3%)
Central418,990 (1.9%)
Atlantic14,930 (0.6%)
North3,685 (3.2%)
 Ontario376,440 (2.8%)
 Alberta369,090 (9.3%)
 British Columbia229,205 (5.0%)
 Manitoba180,055 (14.5%)
 Saskatchewan143,700 (13.4%)
Languages
Canadian English, Canadian Ukrainian
(also Quebec French, Ukrainian, Russian)
Religion
Ukrainian Orthodox, Ukrainian Catholic, Roman Catholic, others[2]
Related ethnic groups
Polish Canadians, Ukrainian Americans, Ukrainians, Slavs

History

Ukrainian Canadian
Population History
YearPop.±%
19015,682—    
191175,432+1227.6%
1921106,721+41.5%
1931225,113+110.9%
1941305,929+35.9%
1951395,043+29.1%
1961473,337+19.8%
1971580,660+22.7%
1981529,615−8.8%
1986961,310+81.5%
19911,054,295+9.7%
19961,026,475−2.6%
20011,071,060+4.3%
20061,209,090+12.9%
20111,251,170+3.5%
20161,359,655+8.7%
Source: Statistics Canada
[5]: 17 [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16]
Note1: 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses, thus population is an undercount.
Note2: 1996-present census populations are undercounts, due to the creation of the "Canadian" ethnic origin category.

Unconfirmed settlement before 1891

Minority opinions among historians of Ukrainians in Canada surround theories that a small number of Ukrainians settled in Canada before 1891. Most controversial is the claim that Ukrainians may have been infantrymen alongside Poles in the Swiss FrenchDe Watteville's Regiment” who fought for the British on the Niagara Peninsula during the War of 1812 – it has been theorized that Ukrainians were among those soldiers who decided to stay in Upper Canada (southern Ontario).[17] Other Ukrainians supposedly arrived as part of other immigrant groups; it has been claimed that individual Ukrainian families may have settled in southern Manitoba in the mid- to late 1870s alongside block settlements of Mennonites and other Germans from the Russian Empire.[17] "Galicians" are noted as being among the miners of the British Columbia gold rushes and figure prominently in some towns in that new province's first census in 1871 (these may have been Poles and Belarusians as well as Ukrainians).[18] Because there is so little definitive documentary evidence of individual Ukrainians among these three groups, they are not generally regarded as among the first Ukrainians in Canada.

First wave: Settlers, 1891–1914

 
Post-independence Ukrainian fifteen-kopiyka stamp commemorating the centennial of Ukrainian settlement in Canada, 1891–1991

During the nineteenth century the territory inhabited by Ukrainians in Europe was divided between the Austro-Hungarian and Russian empires. The Austrian crownlands of Galicia and Bukovina were home to many Ukrainian speakers. Austrian Galicia was one of the poorest and most overpopulated regions in Europe, and had experienced a series of blights and famines. Emigration on a large scale from Galicia to the Balkans (the north-south border region of Croatia and Bosnia) and even to Brazil was already underway by 1891.

The first wave of Ukrainian immigration to Canada began with Iwan (Ivan) Pylypow and Wasyl (Vasyl') Eleniak, who arrived in 1891, and brought several families to settle in 1892. Pylypow helped found the Edna-Star Settlement east of Edmonton, the first and largest Ukrainian block settlement. However, it is Dr. Josef Oleskow,[N 2] along with Cyril Genik, who are considered responsible for the large Ukrainian Canadian population through their promotion of Canada as a destination for immigrants from western (Austrian-ruled) Ukraine in the late 1890s. Ukrainians from Central Ukraine, which was ruled by the Russian monarchy, also came to Canada[19] – but in smaller numbers than those from Galicia and Bukovina. Approximately 170,000 Ukrainians from the Austro-Hungarian Empire arrived in Canada from September 1891 to August 1914.[20]

Clifford Sifton, Canada's Minister of the Interior from 1896 to 1905, also encouraged Ukrainians from Austria-Hungary to immigrate to Canada since he wanted new agricultural immigrants to populate Canada's prairies. After retirement, Sifton defended the new Ukrainian and East European immigrants to Canada – who were not from the United Kingdom, the United States, Scandinavia, Iceland, France or Germany – by stating:

I think that a stalwart peasant in a sheepskin coat, born to the soil, whose forefathers have been farmers for ten generations, with a stout wife and a half-dozen children, is good quality.[21]

This Ukrainian immigration to Canada was largely agrarian, and at first Ukrainian Canadians concentrated in distinct block settlements in the parkland belt of the prairie provinces: Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. While the Canadian Prairies are often compared to the steppes of Ukraine, the settlers came largely from Galicia and Bukovina – which are not steppe lands, but are semi-wooded areas in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains. This is why Ukrainians coming to Canada settled in the wooded aspen parklands – in an arch from Winnipeg and Stuartburn, Manitoba to Edmonton and Leduc, Alberta – rather than the open prairies further south. Furthermore, the semi-feudal nature of land ownership in the Austrian Empire meant that in the "Old Country" people had to pay the pan (landlord) for all their firewood and lumber for building. Upon arriving in Canada, the settlers often demanded wooded land from officials so that they would be able to supply their own needs, even if this meant taking land that was less productive for crops. They also attached deep importance to settling near to family, people from nearby villages or other culturally similar groups, furthering the growth of the block settlements.

Fraternal and benevolent organizations established by these settlers include the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association (ULFTA, affiliated with the Communist Party of Canada),[22] the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood (UCB, affiliated with the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada),[22] and the Ukrainian Self-Reliance League (USRL, affiliated with the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada).[22] The ULFTA transformed itself into the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians in 1946,[23] the UCB and USRL are member organizations of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress today.[24]

By 1914, there were also growing communities of Ukrainian immigrants in eastern Canadian cities, such as Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton, and Windsor. Many of them arrived from the provinces of Podillia, Volhynia, Kyiv and Bessarabia in Russian-ruled Ukraine.[19] In the early years of settlement, Ukrainian immigrants faced considerable amounts of discrimination at the hands of Northern European Canadians, an example of which was the internment.[25][26][27]

Internment (1914–1920)

 
Commemorative plaque and a statue entitled "Why?" / "Pourquoi?" / "Чому (Chomu)?", by John Boxtel at the location of the Castle Mountain Internment Camp, Banff National Park
 
Commemorative statue entitled "Never Forget" / "Ne Jamais Oublier" / "Ніколи Не Забути (Nikoly Ne Zabuty)", by John Boxtel; and damaged plaque at the cemetery of the Kapuskasing Internment Camp, Kapuskasing, northern Ontario[28]

From 1914 to 1920, the political climate of the First World War allowed the Canadian Government to classify immigrants with Austro-Hungarian citizenship as "aliens of enemy nationality". This classification, authorized by the August 1914 War Measures Act, permitted the government to legally compel thousands of Ukrainians in Canada to register with federal authorities. About 5,000 Ukrainian men, and some women and children, were interned at government camps and work sites. Although many Ukrainians were "paroled" into jobs for private companies by 1917, the internment continued until June 20, 1920 – almost a year after the Treaty of Versailles was signed by Canada on June 28, 1919.

There are some two dozen Ukrainian-specific plaques and memorials in Canada commemorating Canada's first national internment operations, including several statues – on the fairgrounds of Canada's National Ukrainian Festival south of Dauphin, Manitoba, the grounds of the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg; and at the locations of the former internment camps in Banff National Park, Alberta, Spirit Lake (La Ferme), Quebec, and Kapuskasing, Ontario. Most were placed by the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association (UCCLA) and its supporters. On August 24, 2005, Prime Minister Paul Martin recognized the Ukrainian Canadian internment as a "dark chapter"[29] in Canadian history, and pledged $2.5 million to fund memorials and educational exhibits[29] although that funding was never provided.

On May 9, 2008, following the 2005 passage of Inky Mark's Bill C-331, the Government of Canada, under Prime Minister Stephen Harper, established a $10 million fund[30] following several months of negotiation with the Ukrainian Canadian community's representatives, including the UCCLA, Ukrainian Canadian Congress and Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko (also known as the Shevchenko Foundation), establishing the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund (CFWWIRF). The Endowment Council of the CFWWIRF uses the interest earned on that amount to fund projects that commemorate the experience of Ukrainians and other Europeans interned between 1914 and 1920. The funds are held in trust by the Shevchenko Foundation. Amongst the commemorative projects funded by the Endowment Council was the unveiling, simultaneously across Canada, of 115 bilingual plaques on August 24, 2014, recalling the 100th anniversary of the first implementation of the War Measures Act. This was known as Project "Сто" (translit. Sto; meaning "one hundred"), and organized by the UCCLA.

Second wave: Settlers, workers and professionals, 1923–1939

 
A group of Ukrainian Canadians pictured at a celebration inside Toronto's Old Fort York, taken in May 1934. Photograph from the M.O. Hammond fonds held at the Archives of Ontario.

In 1923, the Canadian government modified the Immigration Act to allow former subjects of the Austrian Empire to once again enter Canada – and Ukrainian immigration started anew.[31] Ukrainians from western Volhynia – the Polesie and Wołyń Voivodeships (under Polish rule), and southern Bessarabia – also known as the Budjak (under Romanian rule), joined a new wave of emigrants from Polish-governed Galicia and Romanian-governed Bukovina. Around 70,000 Ukrainians from Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia arrived in Canada from 1923 to September 1939,[20] although the flow decreased severely after 1930 due to the Great Depression.

Relatively little farmland remained unclaimed – the majority in the Peace River region of northwestern Alberta – and less than half of this group settled as farmers in the Prairie provinces.[32] The majority became workers in the growing industrial centres of southern Ontario, the Montreal region and the Eastern Townships of Quebec; the mines, smelters and forests of northern Ontario; and the small heavy industries of urban western Canada.[32] A few Ukrainian professionals and intellectuals were accepted into Canada at this time; they later became leaders in the Ukrainian Canadian community.[20]

The second wave was heavily influenced by the struggle for Ukrainian independence during the Russian Civil War, and established two competing fraternal / benevolent organizations in Canada: the United Hetman Organization (UHO) in 1934[33] – which supported the idea of a Ukrainian "Cossack kingdom" led by Pavlo Skoropadskyi;[34] and the rival Ukrainian National Federation (UNF) in 1932[35] – which supported the idea of an independent Ukrainian republic and politically supported the armed Ukrainian nationalist insurgency in Polish-occupied Western Ukraine.[36][37] The UHO ceased to exist by 1960, while the UNF continued to expand and became the largest and most influential Ukrainian organization in Canada, spearheading the creation of the coordinating Ukrainian Canadian Committee (later Ukrainian Canadian Congress) during World War II.[N 3]

Third wave: Workers, professionals and political refugees, 1945–1952

From World War II to 1991, most Ukrainians coming to Canada were political refugees and Displaced Persons who tended to move to cities in southern Ontario, southern Quebec and the Lower Mainland of British Columbia – there are now large Ukrainian communities in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. They established a number of new organizations and affiliated newspapers, women's and youth groups, the most prominent of which was the Canadian League for the Liberation of Ukraine (renamed the League of Ukrainian Canadians after the collapse of the USSR in 1991). The League joined the Ukrainian Canadian Committee (later Ukrainian Canadian Congress) as a member organization in 1959.[38]

Relatively few Ukrainians came to Canada during the Brezhnev and Gorbachev years, as exit visas could take several years to get approved.

Fourth wave: Post-independence immigrants and recent refugees, 1991–present

After the dissolution of the USSR, emigration from Ukraine increased. Rising levels of corruption, the dismantlement of some social services, low-paying employment and loss of jobs in Ukraine, made immigration attractive once again.

Participation in the Canadian economy

In the first half of the twentieth century, Ukrainian Canadians overwhelmingly earned their livings in primary industry – predominantly in agriculture, but also in mining, logging, construction, and the extension of the Canadian railway system;[39] most importantly as labour in completing the transcontinental mainlines of the Canadian Northern Railway and Grand Trunk Pacific, both then nationalized and consolidated into the Canadian National Railway (CN). As agriculture became more mechanized and consolidated, male Ukrainian Canadians shifted into non-farm primary and secondary industry jobs, while women took jobs in domestic work and unskilled service industries.[40] By 1971, only slightly more Ukrainian Canadians worked in agriculture than in the wider Canadian labour force. While they remain somewhat over-represented in agriculture today (7% versus 4% of all working Canadians) and underrepresented in elite managerial positions,[39] Ukrainian Canadians have largely assimilated more into the broader economy, such that the Ukrainian Canadian workforce is now similar to that of Canada as a whole in nearly all other respects.[39][40]

Demography

Canadians of Ukrainian descent total population (1901−2016)
Note1: 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses, thus population is an undercount.
Note2: 1996-present census populations are undercounts, due to the creation of the "Canadian" ethnic origin category.
Canadians of Ukrainian descent percentage of the total population (1901−2016)
Note1: 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses, thus population is an undercount.
Note2: 1996-present census populations are undercounts, due to the creation of the "Canadian" ethnic origin category.

Population

Ukrainian Canadian Population History
1901−2016
Year Population % of total population
1901
[5]: 17 [6]
5,682 0.106%
1911
[5]: 17 [6]
75,432 1.047%
1921
[5]: 17 [6][7]
106,721 1.214%
1931
[5]: 17 [6][7]
225,113 2.169%
1941
[5]: 17 [6][7]
305,929 2.659%
1951
[5]: 17 [6][7]
395,043 2.82%
1961
[5]: 17 [6][7]
473,337 2.595%
1971
[5]: 17 [7]
580,660 2.692%
1981
[8]
529,615 2.199%
1986
[9][10]
961,310 3.842%
1991
[11]
1,054,295 3.906%
1996
[12]
1,026,475 3.598%
2001
[13]
1,071,060 3.614%
2006
[14]
1,209,090 3.87%
2011
[15]
1,251,170 3.808%
2016
[16]
1,359,655 3.946%

Language

 
Ukrainian language street signs alongside English ones in Hafford, Saskatchewan

In addition to the official English and French languages, many prairie public schools offer Ukrainian language education for children, including immersion programs. Generally second language students are taught the local Canadian Ukrainian dialect, rather than Standard Ukrainian.

The Canadian Ukrainian dialect is based on the Ukrainian spoken by the first wave of immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire from 1891 to 1914. Because the Ukrainian language of this era had no words for such things as agricultural machinery other than a plow, words for wildlife or vegetation common to North America and uncommon in Ukraine, words related to the automobile or other self-propelled vehicles on roads, or words for internal combustion engine-powered or electrically-powered tools or home appliances of any kind, extensive borrowings and adaptations from Canadian English were independently made by Ukrainian settlers in the block settlements of the Prairies during their first decades in Canada. The decline of regular communication with relatives in Ukraine, especially the severe restrictions between 1939 and 1989, further isolated the Western Canadian Ukrainian dialect from an evolving Ukrainian language in Soviet Ukraine. Now, immigrants from Ukraine to Western Canada since 1991, speaking Ukrainian, find the Canadian Ukrainian dialect old-fashioned and sometimes strange, for modern Ukrainian no longer uses some of the expressions and vocabulary common to the Canadian dialect – or, in the case of the Canadian loan words and adaptations, never did use, because Standard Ukrainian either invented other terms or borrowed and adapted from other languages, such as French, German or Russian.

There are a few Ukrainian Catholic elementary schools in the Greater Toronto Area, including St. Demetrius Catholic Elementary school, St. Josaphat Catholic Elementary school, and Josef Cardinal Slipyj Elementary school, all in Etobicoke; as well as St. Sofia Catholic Elementary school in Mississauga.[41]

Religion

Most Ukrainians who came to Canada from Galicia were Ukrainian Catholic and those from Bukovina were Ukrainian Orthodox. However, people of both churches faced a shortage of priests in Canada. The Ukrainian Catholic clergy came into conflict with the Roman Catholic hierarchy because they were not celibate and wanted a separate governing structure. At the time, the Russian Orthodox Church was the only Orthodox Christian church that operated in North America – because they had arrived first via Alaska, and traditionally Orthodox churches are territorially exclusive. However, Ukrainians in Canada were suspicious of being controlled from Russia, first by the Tsarist government and later by the Soviets. Partially in response to this, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada was created as a wholly Ukrainian Canadian-controlled alternative. As well, the Ukrainian Catholic clergy were eventually given a separate structure from the Roman Church.

Geographical distribution

Information in this section taken from Statistics Canada, 2016.[42]

Provinces & territories

Province / Territory Percent Ukrainian Total Ukrainians
  Alberta 9.3% 369,090
  British Columbia 5.0% 229,205
  Manitoba 14.5% 180,055
  New Brunswick 0.5% 3,535
  Newfoundland and Labrador 0.3% 1,350
  Northwest Territories 3.2% 1,290
  Nova Scotia 1.0% 9,115
  Nunavut 0.5% 190
  Ontario 2.8% 376,440
  Prince Edward Island 0.7% 930
  Quebec 0.5% 42,550
  Saskatchewan 13.4% 143,700
  Yukon 6.3% 2,205
Total 3.9% 1,359,655

Cities

City Population Ukrainian Population Percentage of Ukrainians
(out of total population)
Percentage of all Canadian Ukrainians
Calgary 1,239,220 77,670 6.4% 5.7%
Edmonton 932,546 98,820 10.8% 7.3%
Hamilton 536,917 18,990 3.6% 1.4%
Montreal 1,704,694 18,010 1.1% 1.3%
Ottawa 923,243 24,965 2.7% 1.8%
Regina 215,106 26,590 12.6% 2.0%
Saskatoon 246,376 38,600 16.0% 2.8%
Toronto 2,721,571 72,345 2.7% 5.3%
Vancouver (Metro Vancouver) 2,463,431 94,400 3.9% 6.9%
Victoria 85,792 5,015 6.1% 0.4%
Windsor 217,188 6,165 2.9% 0.5%
Winnipeg 705,244 99,365 14.4% 7.3%
 
Map of the dominant self-identified ethnic origins of ancestors per census division. Actual physical origins of ancestors may be different. Ukrainian-plurality areas are highlighted in teal. Note that Ukrainians are a significant minority elsewhere, and that, numerically, most Ukrainian Canadians live in cities.
Information in this section taken from both 2006 Census Community Profiles, and Statistics Canada, 2016.

The provinces with the largest Ukrainian populations (single and multiple origins, 2006) are Ontario, 336,355; Alberta, 332,180; British Columbia, 197,265; Manitoba, 167,175; Saskatchewan 129,265; and Quebec, 31,955. In terms of proportion of the total population, the most Ukrainian provinces and territories are Manitoba (15%), Saskatchewan (13%), Alberta (10%), Yukon (5%), British Columbia (5%), and Ontario (3%).

The metropolitan regions with the largest Ukrainian populations (single and multiple origins, 2006) are Edmonton, 144,620; Toronto, 122,510; Winnipeg, 110,335; Vancouver, 81,725; Calgary, 76,240; Saskatoon, 38,825; Hamilton, 27,080; Montreal, 26,150; Regina, 25,725; Ottawa-Gatineau, 21,520; St. Catharines-Niagara, 20,990; Thunder Bay, 17,620; Victoria, 15,020; Kelowna, 13,425; Oshawa, 12,555; London, 10,765; and Kitchener 10,425.

The Census Divisions with the largest percentage of Ukrainians (single and multiple origins, 2006) are Manitoba #12 (25%), Alberta #10 (20%), Alberta #12 (19%), Manitoba #11 (15%), Manitoba #7 (13%), Manitoba #10 (12%), Manitoba #9 (12%), Manitoba #2 (10%).

There are a number of smaller rural communities in Western Canada with significant proportions of Ukrainians (single and multiple origins, 2016), including: Canora, Saskatchewan (52.6%), Speers, Saskatchewan (50%), Andrew, Alberta (48%), Mundare, Alberta (46%), Bradwell, Saskatchewan (41%), Vilna, Alberta (40%), Smoky Lake, Alberta (39%), Hafford, Saskatchewan (39%).[43]

Culture

Having been separated from Ukraine, Ukrainian Canadians have developed their own distinctive Ukrainian culture in Canada. To showcase their unique hybrid culture, Ukrainian Canadians have created institutions that showcase Ukrainian Canadian culture such as Edmonton's Cheremosh and Shumka troupes – among the world's elite Ukrainian dancers; or the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village – where Ukrainian pioneer buildings are displayed along with extensive cultural exhibits.

Ukrainian Canadians have also contributed to Canadian culture as a whole. Actress and comedian Luba Goy, singer Gloria Kaye,[44] Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek, hockey executive Kyle Dubas, and painter William Kurelek, for example, are well known outside the Ukrainian community.

Perhaps one of the most lasting contributions Ukrainian Canadians have made to the wider culture of Canada is the concept of multiculturalism,[40][45] which was promoted as early as 1963 by Senator Paul Yuzyk.[45] During and after the debates surrounding the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, Ukrainian leaders, such as linguist Jaroslav Rudnyckyj, came out in force against the idea of English – French biculturalism,[45] which they believed denied the contributions other peoples had made to Canada. Partly in response to this, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau shifted Canada to a policy of official multiculturalism; notably, the day after the Canadian Multiculturalism Policy of 1971 was officially announced, Trudeau gave a forceful speech in support of the policy at a national assembly of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress in Winnipeg.[45]

Architecture

The Western Ukrainian agricultural settlers brought with them a style of folk architecture dominated by buildings made of unprocessed logs, which were much better suited to the wooded parkland belt rather than the "bald prairie". The first house built – usually a burdei – used some sod; but was not exactly a sod hut, more like a dugout. The second house was often a white-washed and plastered log cabin usually with thatched roof, very similar to those seen in Ukraine. Barns, chicken coops, granaries, and so on were all built using the same techniques as the houses. By the 1930s most Ukrainian Canadians adopted the building styles of the North American mainstream including framed homes and barns built from commercial plans and using milled lumber.

Early churches, built by pioneer farmers rather than trained builders, were basically log cabins with a few added decorations. They aspired to the designs of Ukraine's wooden churches, but were much more humble. Latter churches – such as the "prairie cathedral" style of Father Philip Ruh, using a mixture of Byzantine and Western influences – were much more decorative.

Politics

Many Ukrainians fled Russia, Poland,[37] and later, the Soviet Union, to find freedom and a better life in Canada. For them Canada became "an anti-Russia", where they could realize their political and economic ideas. Most Ukrainian Canadians were anti-Soviet, yet a minor group of Ukrainians has since 1910 supported Canadian socialism and contributed to the formation of the Communist Party of Canada, and formed a significant bloc within that group. They were also active in other Marxist organizations like the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association (ULFTA). Ukrainians also played a central role in the 1930s formation of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and the 1960s formation of the New Democratic Party. Ukrainians were a notable portion of the Mackenzie–Papineau Battalion of Canadians who volunteered and fought in the Spanish Civil War on the side of the leftist republican government against the nationalist troops of Generalísimo Francisco Franco.

Ukrainians in Canada at first supported the Liberal Party federally and provincially, a minority moved towards the 1930s protest parties of Social Credit and the CCF federally and provincially. The vocal anti-communism of John Diefenbaker in the 1950s led the more nationalist-minded to support the federal Progressive Conservatives. Today's Ukrainian community tends to vote based on economic class interests and regional preferences.[46]

The nationalist movement, through the Ukrainian National Federation and the Canadian League for the Liberation of Ukraine, was also an important part of the community. After Ukraine became independent Canada was one of the first nations to recognize Ukraine. From 1992 to 1994, Ukrainian Canadians were vital in fundraising to purchase a building in Ottawa to house the Embassy of Ukraine. As well, Canada has recognized the Holodomor (Ukrainian Famine) as an act of genocide. Canada also sent many observers to Ukraine during the disputed 2004 presidential election (see: Orange Revolution). The Government of Canada as well as its provincial governments – especially the Ukrainian strongholds in Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan – do much to support Ukraine's economic and political development.

The Ukrainian Canadians had and have much more influence in Canadian society and policy than any other East European group; therefore they have had several prominent figures in top positions. Ray Hnatyshyn was the 24th Governor General of Canada (1990–1995) and the first Governor General of Ukrainian descent. Ukrainians were also elected leaders of Canada's prairie provinces: Gary Filmon was Premier of Manitoba (1988–1999), nearly simultaneously with Hnatyshyn, and Roy Romanow was Premier of Saskatchewan (1991–2001), also partly at the same time as Filmon and Hnatyshyn.[47]

Ed Stelmach became Premier of Alberta in 2006 as the third provincial premier of Ukrainian descent. He succeeded Ralph Klein (1992–2006), who had cabinets with many Ukrainian ministers. Stelmach himself is the grandson of Ukrainian immigrants and speaks fluent Ukrainian.[47] He left office in October 2011.

Chrystia Freeland, the Liberal Deputy Prime Minister of Canada, is of Ukrainian descent and speaks Ukrainian. Rona Ambrose (née Chapchuk), who was Leader of the Opposition and interim Conservative party leader from 2015 to 2017, is of Ukrainian descent.

Arts

 
A Ukrainian dance troupe at the BC Ukrainian Cultural Festival
 
In 1974, what was then the world's largest pysanka was erected in Vegreville, Alberta, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. It has since been exceeded by a pysanka built in Ukraine.

Canada is home to some very vibrant Ukrainian dance groups. Some examples of Ukrainian dance ensembles in Canada are the Ukrainian Shumka Dancers and the Cheremosh Ukrainian Dance Company in Edmonton, the Rusalka Ukrainian Dance Ensemble and Rozmai Ukrainian Dance Company in Winnipeg, the Svitanok Ukrainian Dance Ensemble in Ottawa, and hundreds of other groups.

The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko provides some financial support for Ukrainian Canadian performing, literary and visual arts.

Ukrainians in general are noted for their elaborately decorated Easter Eggs or pysanky, and that is also true in Canada. The world's second largest pysanka is in Vegreville, Alberta.

Ukrainian Canadian churches are also famous for their onion domes, which have elaborately painted murals on their interior, and for their iconostasis, or icon walls.

Music

Ukrainian Canadian musicians and groups include Randy Bachman, the Canadian Bandurist Capella, Ron Cahute, Rick Danko, Victor Mishalow, Chantal Kreviazuk, Gordie Johnson, Canadian Idol season 2 runner-up Theresa Sokyrka, Zirka from Toronto, and Rushnychok from Montreal. The Edmonton-based group the Kubasonics focuses on a folk fusion of traditional Ukrainian music with modern touches.

Food

Cultural food is an important part of Ukrainian culture. Special foods used at Easter as well as Christmas are not made at any other time of the year. In fact on Christmas Eve (January 6[N 4] in the Gregorian calendar), a special twelve-dish meatless meal is served. The best-known foods are borshch (a vegetable soup, usually with beets), holobtsi (cabbage rolls), pyrohy or varenyky (dumplings often called "perogies"), and kovbasa (sausage).

Several items of Ukrainian food and culture have been enshrined with roadside attractions throughout the Prairie provinces. These are celebrated in the polka Giants of the Prairies by the Kubasonics. For example, the world's largest perogy is in Glendon, Alberta,[50] and the world's biggest kovbasa is in Mundare, Alberta.[51]

Institutions

There are a number of Ukrainian Canadian institutions, such as:

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ukrainian: Українські канадці, Україноканадці, romanizedUkrains'ki kanadtsi, Ukrainokanadtsi; French: Canadiens d'origine ukrainienne
  2. ^ Dr. Oleskow, who had a PhD in agronomy, wrote two pamphlets – "About Free Lands" (Pro Vilni Zemli, spring 1895), and "On Emigration" (O emigratsiy, December 1895) – which were widely read in the Prosvita halls of the Ukrainian areas of the Austrian Empire.
  3. ^ The UCC was the driving force in organizing the global umbrella World Congress of Free Ukrainians in the immediate postwar period; the WCFU would expand and be renamed the Ukrainian World Congress after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
  4. ^ Because Ukrainian Canadians are the largest Eastern Christian group in Canada, January 6–7 is commonly referred by Canadians of all origins as "Ukrainian Christmas".[48][49]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Statistics Canada (October 25, 2017). "2016 National Household Survey: Data tables". Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  2. ^ Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1863; Martynowych 2011; Swyripa, "Canada", p. 348.
  3. ^ 2006 Census Community Profiles, see for example Division No. 12, Manitoba.
  4. ^ National Household Survey Profile, Canada, 2011
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (July 29, 1999). "Historical statistics of Canada, section A: Population and migration - ARCHIVED". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "1961 Census of Canada : population : vol. I - part 2 = 1961 Recensement du Canada : population : vol. I - partie 2. Ethnic groups". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "1971 Census of Canada : population : vol. I - part 3 = Recensement du Canada 1971 : population : vol. I - partie 3. Ethnic groups". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "1981 Census of Canada : volume 1 - national series : population = Recensement du Canada de 1981 : volume 1 - série nationale : population. Ethnic origin". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  9. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "Census Canada 1986 Profile of ethnic groups". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "1986 Census of Canada: Ethnic Diversity In Canada". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  11. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (April 3, 2013). "1991 Census: The nation. Ethnic origin". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  12. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (June 4, 2019). "Data tables, 1996 Census Population by Ethnic Origin (188) and Sex (3), Showing Single and Multiple Responses (3), for Canada, Provinces, Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas, 1996 Census (20% Sample Data)". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  13. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (December 23, 2013). "Ethnic Origin (232), Sex (3) and Single and Multiple Responses (3) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2001 Census - 20% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  14. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (May 1, 2020). "Ethnic Origin (247), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census - 20% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  15. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (January 23, 2019). "Ethnic Origin (264), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3), Generation Status (4), Age Groups (10) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2011 National Household Survey". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (June 17, 2019). "Ethnic Origin (279), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3), Generation Status (4), Age (12) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2016 Census - 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  17. ^ a b Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862.
  18. ^ Canadian census, 1871
  19. ^ a b Kukushkin, p. 30-54; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 3.
  20. ^ a b c Isajiw and Makuch, p. 333; Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862.
  21. ^ "The Quebec History Encyclopedia: Clifford Sifton". faculty.marianopolis.edu. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  22. ^ a b c Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 18; Isajiw and Makuch, p. 346-47, 345.
  23. ^ Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1863; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 18; Isajiw and Makuch, p. 346-47, 345.
  24. ^ Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1863; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 19; Isajiw and Makuch, p. 346-48.
  25. ^ Satzewich, V. (2004). The Ukrainian Diaspora. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780203217498. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  26. ^ Allahar, A.; Côté, J.E. (1998). Richer and Poorer: The Structure of Inequality in Canada. James Lorimer Limited, Publishers. p. 70. ISBN 9781550286106. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  27. ^ Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. p. 547. ISBN 9780802083906. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  28. ^ "100 years since first death in Kapuskasing internment camp". Sudbury: CBC News. June 3, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  29. ^ a b PM Reaches out to Ukrainians – The Globe and Mail, August 25, 2005
  30. ^ "About the Fund" (official website). The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund and The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko. 2012. Retrieved April 15, 2014.
  31. ^ Swyripa, "Canada", p. 344.
  32. ^ a b Isajiw and Makuch, p. 333.
  33. ^ Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862; Isajiw and Makuch, p. 346-47, 345.
  34. ^ Swyripa, "Canada", p. 351; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 18.
  35. ^ Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862; Isajiw and Makuch, p. 346-48, 345; Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 18.
  36. ^ Swyripa, "Canada", p. 351-52.
  37. ^ a b Swyripa, "Ukrainians", p. 1862–63; Swyripa, "Canada", p. 352.
  38. ^ Luciuk and Kordan 1989, map 18.
  39. ^ a b c "Ukrainians of Canada". Encyclopedia.com. Cengage Group. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  40. ^ a b c Swyripa, Frances A; Lambert, Maude-Emmanuelle (December 10, 2021). "Ukrainian Canadians". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  41. ^ Callan, Isaac; Rocca, Ryan (April 6, 2022). "Students attend Toronto Ukrainian schools after fleeing war with Russia". Global Toronto. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
  42. ^ "2016 Census of Canada: Topic-based tabulations | Ethnic Origin (247), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census – 20% Sample Data". Statistics Canada. January 11, 2020. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  43. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (February 8, 2017). "Census Profile, 2016 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved April 18, 2022.
  44. ^ Czuboka, p. 211-212.
  45. ^ a b c d Cuenco, Michael (Spring 2021). "A Tale of Two Immigration Systems: Canada and the United States". American Affairs. American Affairs Foundation Inc. V (1).
  46. ^ Swyripa, "Canada", p. 348.
  47. ^ a b Hans-Joachim Hoppe: (in German) "Ukrainian vastnesses – Canada was and is for many East Europeans a country of prophecy", in: Neue Zürcher Zeitung, no. 211, September 12/13, 2009, p. B3.
  48. ^ Popeski, Ron (January 6, 2016). "Opinion – Should Ukrainians do away with Ukrainian Christmas?". CBC Manitoba. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  49. ^ "Joyous, family celebration marks Ukrainian Christmas". Winnipeg Sun. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  50. ^ Giant Perogy – Glendon, Canada – Atlas Obscura
  51. ^ The World's Largest Sausage – Mundare, Canada – Atlas Obscura
  52. ^ University of Alberta Press. "Kule Folklore Centre".
  53. ^ "About the Award". Kobzar Book Award website. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
  54. ^ "Ukrainian Canadian Social Services".
  55. ^ Infoukes.com. "Taras Shevchenko Museum – the only Shevchenko Museum in the Americas".

References

  • Swyripa, Frances A. (1985). "Ukrainians". In Mel Hurtig (ed.). The Canadian Encyclopedia. Vol. 3 (1st ed.). Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers. p. 1863. ISBN 0-88830-272-X. In 1981 only 30.0% and 18.6% of Ukrainian Canadians belonged to the Ukrainian Catholic and Ukrainian Orthodox churches, respectively; 16.8% were Roman Catholic and 13.3% United Church adherents.
  • Martynowych, Orest (2011). "The Seraphimite, Independent Greek, Presbyterian and United Churches". Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies, University of Manitoba.
  • Swyripa, Frances (1984). "Canada". In Volodymyr Kubiyovych (ed.). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 1, A–F. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 352. ISBN 0-8020-3362-8. A unique religious experiment originated with a Russian Orthodox priest, S. Ustvolsky. As the monk Seraphim, self-proclaimed bishop and metropolitan of the Orthodox Russian church for America, he arrived in Canada in 1903 and began to ordain priests. In 1904, alarmed by Seraphim's growing eccentricities, several priests, led by I. Bodrug, broke with him and formed the Ruthenian Independent Greek church. The new church retained the Eastern rite and liturgy but was supervised and financially supported by the Presbyterian church, with which Bodrug had contacts. At its height, the Independent Greek Church claimed 60,000 adherents. It declined after 1907 when Presbyterian pressure forced genuine Protestant reform; it became part of the Presbyterian church and then of the United church. Bodrug remained within the Ukrainian evangelical movement, working closely with the Ukrainian Evangelical Alliance in North America (est. 1922). In 1931, 1.6 percent of Ukrainian Canadians were United church adherents. By 1971 intermarriage and assimilation had increased the figure to 13.9 percent, the fourth-largest denomination among Ukrainian Canadians.
  • Swyripa, Frances A. (1985). "Ukrainians". In Mel Hurtig (ed.). The Canadian Encyclopedia. Vol. 3 (1st ed.). Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers. p. 1862. ISBN 0-88830-272-X. Isolated individuals of Ukrainian background may have come to Canada during the War of 1812 as mercenaries in the de Meuron and de Watteville regiments. It is possible that others participated in Russian exploration and colonization on the West Coast, came with Mennonite and other German immigrants in the 1870s, or entered Canada from the US. [United States – ed.]
  • Luciuk, Lubomyr; Kordan, Bohdan (1989). Creating a Landscape: A Geography of Ukrainians in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. Map 3. ISBN 0-8020-5823-X. Only about one-fifth of the Ukrainians in Canada would come from Ukrainian lands controlled by the tsarist empire until 1917 and by the Soviets thereafter.
  • Isajiw, Wsevolod; Makuch, Andrij (1994). "Ukrainians in Canada". In Ann Lencyk Pawliczko (ed.). Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 333. ISBN 0-8020-0595-0. Because most of the 'free' lands available for agricultural settlement had already been granted to earlier immigrants, the incoming population tended not to establish themselves as farmers. A substantial number settled in the Prairie provinces and worked as farm hands, while some took advantage of land grants being offered in the northern Peace River region of Alberta. Eventually, some of these immigrants did start up their own farming operations in and around the main areas of Ukrainian settlement. The majority of Ukrainians in this second wave, however, worked as labourers in the mining and forestry regions of northern Ontario and in the cities of central Canada and the Prairies. A small portion of the incoming immigration consisted of individuals with a higher level of education than that possessed by the earlier immigrants, affording them the opportunity to exact a different entry-level status. Among this group were skilled individuals who could assume critical positions in the Ukrainian press and the community's cultural-educational institutions.
  • Swyripa, Frances A. (1985). "Ukrainians". In Mel Hurtig (ed.). The Canadian Encyclopedia. Vol. 3 (1st ed.). Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers. p. 1862. ISBN 0-88830-272-X. Between the 2 world wars some 70,000 Ukrainians immigrated to Canada for political and economic reasons. They included war veterans, intellectuals and professionals, as well as peasants
  • Swyripa, Frances (1984). "Canada". In Volodymyr Kubiyovych (ed.). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 1, A–F. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 351–52. ISBN 0-8020-3362-8. Interwar immigrants introduced a number of new organizations. The paramilitary sporting Sitch [sic] (renamed the Canadian Sitch Organization in 1928) was founded in 1924 with official support from the Ukrainian Catholic church. It declined with the appearance of the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood and in 1934 was reorganized without church backing as the United Hetman Organization, a conservative monarchist movement that favored P. Skoropadsky as hetman of Ukraine. After the death of his son, D. Skoropadsky, in 1957 the movement, never too popular, rapidly declined. In 1928 the republican-inclined veterans of the Ukrainian independence struggle formed the Ukrainian War Veterans' Association (UWVA). In 1932 it provided the base for the Ukrainian National Federation, which espoused the militant nationalism of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists.
  • Swyripa, Frances A. (1985). "Ukrainians". In Mel Hurtig (ed.). The Canadian Encyclopedia. Vol. 3 (1st ed.). Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers. pp. 1862–63. ISBN 0-88830-272-X. National organizations emerged in the interwar years. The procommunist Ukrainian Labour-Farmer Temple Association (est. 1924) attracted the unemployed in the 1930s. The Ukrainian Self-Reliance League (est. 1927) and the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood (est. 1932) represented Orthodox and Catholic laity, respectively. Organizations introduced by the second immigration reflected Ukrainian revolutionary trends in Europe. The small conservative, monarchical United Hetman Organization (est 1934) was counterbalanced by the influential nationalistic, republican Ukrainian National Federation (est. 1932). Despite tensions, all groups publicized Polish pacification and Stalinist terror in Ukraine in the 1930s; only the Ukrainian Labour-Farmer Temple Association condoned the Soviet purges and the artificial famine of 1932–33 that killed 6 million people; its successor, the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians (est. 1946), has declined steadily.
  • Swyripa, Frances (1984). "Canada". In Volodymyr Kubiyovych (ed.). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 1, A–F. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 352. ISBN 0-8020-3362-8. During the 1930s there was considerable friction between the Canadian-oriented Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood and Ukrainian Self-Reliance League and such Ukraine-oriented organizations as the Ukrainian National Federation. In spite of rivalries, Ukrainian-Canadian organizations gave moral and financial assistance to Ukrainian émigré centers in Western Europe and to Ukrainian veterans, war orphans, and numerous causes in Poland and neighboring countries. In the 1930s Polish pacification in Western Ukraine and Stalinist terror in the Soviet Union were widely publicized. The ULFTA, which extolled the Soviet Ukrainian state and especially its cultural flowering in the 1920s, failed to question the purges, forced collectivization, and artificial famine of the 1930s.
  • Czuboka, Michael (1983). Ukrainian Canadian, Eh?: The Ukrainians of Canada and Elsewhere As Perceived By Themselves And Others. Winnipeg, Manitoba: Communigraphics / Printers' Aid Group. pp. 211–12. ISBN 0-920073-00-X. Gloria Kaye was born in northern Alberta as Gloria Slavka Kolmatycki on March 10, 1956, the youngest of five children of Mike and Annie Kolmatycki. [...] Kolmatycki changed her Ukrainian name to 'Kaye' for 'ease in handling.' As Gloria Kaye, she sang on Canadian television on the Tommy Hunter Show, It's Happening, Show of the Week, Juliette, Music Hop, Robbie Lane, and the Merv Griffin show in the United States.
  • Swyripa, Frances (1984). "Canada". In Volodymyr Kubiyovych (ed.). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 1, A–F. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 348. ISBN 0-8020-3362-8. For many years Ukrainians supported the Liberal party, which was in power when they first arrived. Together with other Canadians from the lower socioeconomic strata, Ukrainians have shown considerable support for Canadian protest parties, which emerged in the 1930s – the Social Credit party and the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (subsequently the New Democratic party). During the Great Depression the Ukrainians, Jews, and Finns were the most prominent ethnic groups within the Communist Party of Canada. In the late 1950s many Ukrainians turned to the Progressive Conservative party, approving J. Diefenbaker's anticommunism and his appointment of the first Ukrainian Canadian to the federal cabinet. Increasingly, the voting habits of Ukrainians reflect their economic class or region rather than any common ethnic pattern.

Further reading

  • Hoppe, Hans-Joachim Ukraine's conflict and the Ukrainian diaspora in Canada, Kyiv Post, September 5, 2015.
  • Kordan, Bohdan and Luciuk, Lubomyr, eds. (1986). A Delicate and Difficult Question: Documents in the History of Ukrainians in Canada, 1899–1962, Kingston: Limestone Press. ISBN 0-919642-08-X.
  • Kordan, Bohdan (2000). Ukrainian Canadians and the Canada Census, 1981–1996, Saskatoon: Heritage Press. ISBN 0-88880-422-9.
  • Kordan, Bohdan (2001). Canada and the Ukrainian Question, 1939–1945, Montreal-Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0-7735-2230-1.
  • Kukushkin, Vadim (2007). From Peasants to Labourers: Ukrainian and Belarusian Immigration from the Russian Empire to Canada, Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. excerpt and text search
  • Kulyk-Keefer, Janice (2005). Dark Ghost in the Corner: Imagining Ukrainian-Canadian Identity, Saskatoon: Heritage Press. ISBN 0-88880-497-0.
  • Luciuk, Kassandra (Spring 2019). "More Dangerous Than Many a Pamphlet or Propaganda Book: The Ukrainian Canadian Left, Theatre, and Propaganda in the 1920s". Labour / Le Travail. Canadian Committee on Labour History. 89: 77–104. doi:10.1353/llt.2019.0003. JSTOR 26741322. S2CID 164950170.
  • Luciuk, Lubomyr and Kordan, Bohdan (1989). Creating a Landscape: A Geography of Ukrainians in Canada, Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-5823-X.
  • Luciuk, Lubomyr and Hryniuk, Stella, eds. (1991). Canada's Ukrainians: Negotiating an Identity, Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-5978-3.
  • Luciuk, Lubomyr Y. (2000). Searching For Place: Ukrainian Displaced Persons, Canada, and the Migration of Memory. University of Toronto Press. doi:10.3138/9781442679672. ISBN 0-8020-8088-X.
  • Lupul, Manoly, ed. (1984). Visible Symbols: Cultural Expression Among Canada's Ukrainians, Edmonton: Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press. ISBN 0-920862-27-6.
  • Lupul, Manoly, (1982) A Heritage in Transition: Essays on the History of Ukrainians in Canada
  • Martynowych, Orest (1991). Ukrainians in Canada: The formative period, 1891–1924. Edmonton: Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press. ISBN 0-920862-76-4.
  • Martynowych, Orest (ed.) (2011). "Ukrainian-Canadian History, 1891–Present: A List of English-language Secondary Sources (Monographs, Book chapters, Collections, Articles)." Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies University of Manitoba.
  • Melnycky, Peter. "'Canadians and Ukrainians Inseparably': Recent Writing on the History of Ukrainian Settlement in Canada," Manitoba History, Number 24, Autumn 1992 online edition, historiography
  • Petelycky, Stefan (1999). Into Auschwitz, For Ukraine. Kingston-Kyiv: Kashtan Press. ISBN 1-896354-16-5. online edition
  • Prymak, Thomas M. (1988). Maple Leaf and Trident: The Ukrainian Canadians During the Second World War. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario.
  • Satzewich, Vic (2002). The Ukrainian Diaspora. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-29658-7.
  • Swyripa, Frances (1993). Wedded to the Cause: Ukrainian-Canadian Women and Ethnic Identity, 1891–1991
  • Swyripa, Frances (1999). Ukrainians. Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario.
  • Swyripa, Frances and John Herd Thompson, eds. (1983) Loyalties in Conflict: Ukrainians in Canada During the Great War 213pp; 8 essays by scholars
  • Yuzyk, Paul. "The First Ukrainians in Manitoba" Manitoba Historical Society Transactions, Series 3, 1951–52 online
  • Зав'ялов А. В. Соціальна адаптація українських іммігрантів : монографія / А. В. Зав'ялов. — Київ : Саміт-книга, 2020. — 180 с. (in Ukrainian)

External links

  • Ukrainian Canadian Congress
  • Ukrainian diaspora in Canada and U.S.
  • Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association
  • Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund
  • Ukrainian Museum of Canada in Saskatoon
  • Ukrainian Cultural and Educational Centre "Oseredok", Winnipeg
  • Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies
  • Kule Folklore Centre at the University of Alberta
  • Ukrainian Language Education Centre, University of Alberta, Edmonton
  • Ukrainian Canadian Archives & Museum of Alberta, Edmonton
  • Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, Alberta
  • Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko
  • Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg
  • Canadian Ukrainian Immigrant Aid Society
  • Ukrainian Canadian Social Services
  • The John Luczkiw Collection, University of Toronto
  • The Ukrainian Collection of the University of Calgary
  • Taras Shevchenko Museum in Toronto
  • Final Report of the 1985–1986 Deschênes Commission

ukrainian, canadians, canadian, citizens, ukrainian, descent, ukrainian, born, people, immigrated, canada, 2016, there, were, estimated, persons, full, partial, ukrainian, origin, residing, canada, majority, being, canadian, born, citizens, making, them, canad. Ukrainian Canadians N 1 are Canadian citizens of Ukrainian descent or Ukrainian born people who immigrated to Canada In 2016 there were an estimated 1 359 655 persons of full or partial Ukrainian origin residing in Canada the majority being Canadian born citizens making them Canada s eleventh largest ethnic group 1 and giving Canada the world s third largest Ukrainian population behind Ukraine itself and Russia Self identified Ukrainians are the plurality in several rural areas of Western Canada 3 According to the 2011 census of the 1 251 170 who identified as Ukrainian only 144 260 or 11 5 could speak the Ukrainian language including the Canadian Ukrainian dialect 4 Ukrainian CanadiansCanadiens d origine ukrainienneUkrayinski kanadciUkrainian Canadians as percent of population by province amp territoryTotal population1 359 655 by ancestry 2016 Census 1 Regions with significant populationsWest922 050 8 3 Central418 990 1 9 Atlantic14 930 0 6 North3 685 3 2 Ontario376 440 2 8 Alberta369 090 9 3 British Columbia229 205 5 0 Manitoba180 055 14 5 Saskatchewan143 700 13 4 LanguagesCanadian English Canadian Ukrainian also Quebec French Ukrainian Russian ReligionUkrainian Orthodox Ukrainian Catholic Roman Catholic others 2 Related ethnic groupsPolish Canadians Ukrainian Americans Ukrainians Slavs Contents 1 History 1 1 Unconfirmed settlement before 1891 1 2 First wave Settlers 1891 1914 1 3 Internment 1914 1920 1 4 Second wave Settlers workers and professionals 1923 1939 1 5 Third wave Workers professionals and political refugees 1945 1952 1 6 Fourth wave Post independence immigrants and recent refugees 1991 present 2 Participation in the Canadian economy 3 Demography 3 1 Population 3 2 Language 3 3 Religion 4 Geographical distribution 4 1 Provinces amp territories 4 2 Cities 5 Culture 5 1 Architecture 5 2 Politics 5 3 Arts 5 4 Music 5 5 Food 5 6 Institutions 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditUkrainian CanadianPopulation HistoryYearPop 19015 682 191175 432 1227 6 1921106 721 41 5 1931225 113 110 9 1941305 929 35 9 1951395 043 29 1 1961473 337 19 8 1971580 660 22 7 1981529 615 8 8 1986961 310 81 5 19911 054 295 9 7 19961 026 475 2 6 20011 071 060 4 3 20061 209 090 12 9 20111 251 170 3 5 20161 359 655 8 7 Source Statistics Canada 5 17 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Note1 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses thus population is an undercount Note2 1996 present census populations are undercounts due to the creation of the Canadian ethnic origin category Unconfirmed settlement before 1891 Edit Minority opinions among historians of Ukrainians in Canada surround theories that a small number of Ukrainians settled in Canada before 1891 Most controversial is the claim that Ukrainians may have been infantrymen alongside Poles in the Swiss French De Watteville s Regiment who fought for the British on the Niagara Peninsula during the War of 1812 it has been theorized that Ukrainians were among those soldiers who decided to stay in Upper Canada southern Ontario 17 Other Ukrainians supposedly arrived as part of other immigrant groups it has been claimed that individual Ukrainian families may have settled in southern Manitoba in the mid to late 1870s alongside block settlements of Mennonites and other Germans from the Russian Empire 17 Galicians are noted as being among the miners of the British Columbia gold rushes and figure prominently in some towns in that new province s first census in 1871 these may have been Poles and Belarusians as well as Ukrainians 18 Because there is so little definitive documentary evidence of individual Ukrainians among these three groups they are not generally regarded as among the first Ukrainians in Canada First wave Settlers 1891 1914 Edit Post independence Ukrainian fifteen kopiyka stamp commemorating the centennial of Ukrainian settlement in Canada 1891 1991 See also Post Confederation Canada 1867 1914 Immigration to the West and Block settlement Ukrainian Further information Dominion Lands Act and Dominion Land Survey During the nineteenth century the territory inhabited by Ukrainians in Europe was divided between the Austro Hungarian and Russian empires The Austrian crownlands of Galicia and Bukovina were home to many Ukrainian speakers Austrian Galicia was one of the poorest and most overpopulated regions in Europe and had experienced a series of blights and famines Emigration on a large scale from Galicia to the Balkans the north south border region of Croatia and Bosnia and even to Brazil was already underway by 1891 The first wave of Ukrainian immigration to Canada began with Iwan Ivan Pylypow and Wasyl Vasyl Eleniak who arrived in 1891 and brought several families to settle in 1892 Pylypow helped found the Edna Star Settlement east of Edmonton the first and largest Ukrainian block settlement However it is Dr Josef Oleskow N 2 along with Cyril Genik who are considered responsible for the large Ukrainian Canadian population through their promotion of Canada as a destination for immigrants from western Austrian ruled Ukraine in the late 1890s Ukrainians from Central Ukraine which was ruled by the Russian monarchy also came to Canada 19 but in smaller numbers than those from Galicia and Bukovina Approximately 170 000 Ukrainians from the Austro Hungarian Empire arrived in Canada from September 1891 to August 1914 20 Clifford Sifton Canada s Minister of the Interior from 1896 to 1905 also encouraged Ukrainians from Austria Hungary to immigrate to Canada since he wanted new agricultural immigrants to populate Canada s prairies After retirement Sifton defended the new Ukrainian and East European immigrants to Canada who were not from the United Kingdom the United States Scandinavia Iceland France or Germany by stating I think that a stalwart peasant in a sheepskin coat born to the soil whose forefathers have been farmers for ten generations with a stout wife and a half dozen children is good quality 21 This Ukrainian immigration to Canada was largely agrarian and at first Ukrainian Canadians concentrated in distinct block settlements in the parkland belt of the prairie provinces Alberta Saskatchewan and Manitoba While the Canadian Prairies are often compared to the steppes of Ukraine the settlers came largely from Galicia and Bukovina which are not steppe lands but are semi wooded areas in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains This is why Ukrainians coming to Canada settled in the wooded aspen parklands in an arch from Winnipeg and Stuartburn Manitoba to Edmonton and Leduc Alberta rather than the open prairies further south Furthermore the semi feudal nature of land ownership in the Austrian Empire meant that in the Old Country people had to pay the pan landlord for all their firewood and lumber for building Upon arriving in Canada the settlers often demanded wooded land from officials so that they would be able to supply their own needs even if this meant taking land that was less productive for crops They also attached deep importance to settling near to family people from nearby villages or other culturally similar groups furthering the growth of the block settlements Fraternal and benevolent organizations established by these settlers include the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association ULFTA affiliated with the Communist Party of Canada 22 the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood UCB affiliated with the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada 22 and the Ukrainian Self Reliance League USRL affiliated with the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada 22 The ULFTA transformed itself into the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians in 1946 23 the UCB and USRL are member organizations of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress today 24 By 1914 there were also growing communities of Ukrainian immigrants in eastern Canadian cities such as Toronto Montreal Hamilton and Windsor Many of them arrived from the provinces of Podillia Volhynia Kyiv and Bessarabia in Russian ruled Ukraine 19 In the early years of settlement Ukrainian immigrants faced considerable amounts of discrimination at the hands of Northern European Canadians an example of which was the internment 25 26 27 Internment 1914 1920 Edit Main article Ukrainian Canadian internment Commemorative plaque and a statue entitled Why Pourquoi Chomu Chomu by John Boxtel at the location of the Castle Mountain Internment Camp Banff National Park Commemorative statue entitled Never Forget Ne Jamais Oublier Nikoli Ne Zabuti Nikoly Ne Zabuty by John Boxtel and damaged plaque at the cemetery of the Kapuskasing Internment Camp Kapuskasing northern Ontario 28 From 1914 to 1920 the political climate of the First World War allowed the Canadian Government to classify immigrants with Austro Hungarian citizenship as aliens of enemy nationality This classification authorized by the August 1914 War Measures Act permitted the government to legally compel thousands of Ukrainians in Canada to register with federal authorities About 5 000 Ukrainian men and some women and children were interned at government camps and work sites Although many Ukrainians were paroled into jobs for private companies by 1917 the internment continued until June 20 1920 almost a year after the Treaty of Versailles was signed by Canada on June 28 1919 There are some two dozen Ukrainian specific plaques and memorials in Canada commemorating Canada s first national internment operations including several statues on the fairgrounds of Canada s National Ukrainian Festival south of Dauphin Manitoba the grounds of the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg and at the locations of the former internment camps in Banff National Park Alberta Spirit Lake La Ferme Quebec and Kapuskasing Ontario Most were placed by the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association UCCLA and its supporters On August 24 2005 Prime Minister Paul Martin recognized the Ukrainian Canadian internment as a dark chapter 29 in Canadian history and pledged 2 5 million to fund memorials and educational exhibits 29 although that funding was never provided On May 9 2008 following the 2005 passage of Inky Mark s Bill C 331 the Government of Canada under Prime Minister Stephen Harper established a 10 million fund 30 following several months of negotiation with the Ukrainian Canadian community s representatives including the UCCLA Ukrainian Canadian Congress and Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko also known as the Shevchenko Foundation establishing the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund CFWWIRF The Endowment Council of the CFWWIRF uses the interest earned on that amount to fund projects that commemorate the experience of Ukrainians and other Europeans interned between 1914 and 1920 The funds are held in trust by the Shevchenko Foundation Amongst the commemorative projects funded by the Endowment Council was the unveiling simultaneously across Canada of 115 bilingual plaques on August 24 2014 recalling the 100th anniversary of the first implementation of the War Measures Act This was known as Project Sto translit Sto meaning one hundred and organized by the UCCLA Second wave Settlers workers and professionals 1923 1939 Edit See also Polonization Ukrainians A group of Ukrainian Canadians pictured at a celebration inside Toronto s Old Fort York taken in May 1934 Photograph from the M O Hammond fonds held at the Archives of Ontario In 1923 the Canadian government modified the Immigration Act to allow former subjects of the Austrian Empire to once again enter Canada and Ukrainian immigration started anew 31 Ukrainians from western Volhynia the Polesie and Wolyn Voivodeships under Polish rule and southern Bessarabia also known as the Budjak under Romanian rule joined a new wave of emigrants from Polish governed Galicia and Romanian governed Bukovina Around 70 000 Ukrainians from Poland Romania and Czechoslovakia arrived in Canada from 1923 to September 1939 20 although the flow decreased severely after 1930 due to the Great Depression Relatively little farmland remained unclaimed the majority in the Peace River region of northwestern Alberta and less than half of this group settled as farmers in the Prairie provinces 32 The majority became workers in the growing industrial centres of southern Ontario the Montreal region and the Eastern Townships of Quebec the mines smelters and forests of northern Ontario and the small heavy industries of urban western Canada 32 A few Ukrainian professionals and intellectuals were accepted into Canada at this time they later became leaders in the Ukrainian Canadian community 20 The second wave was heavily influenced by the struggle for Ukrainian independence during the Russian Civil War and established two competing fraternal benevolent organizations in Canada the United Hetman Organization UHO in 1934 33 which supported the idea of a Ukrainian Cossack kingdom led by Pavlo Skoropadskyi 34 and the rival Ukrainian National Federation UNF in 1932 35 which supported the idea of an independent Ukrainian republic and politically supported the armed Ukrainian nationalist insurgency in Polish occupied Western Ukraine 36 37 The UHO ceased to exist by 1960 while the UNF continued to expand and became the largest and most influential Ukrainian organization in Canada spearheading the creation of the coordinating Ukrainian Canadian Committee later Ukrainian Canadian Congress during World War II N 3 Third wave Workers professionals and political refugees 1945 1952 Edit See also Ostarbeiter Displaced persons camps in post World War II Europe and Deschenes Commission This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message From World War II to 1991 most Ukrainians coming to Canada were political refugees and Displaced Persons who tended to move to cities in southern Ontario southern Quebec and the Lower Mainland of British Columbia there are now large Ukrainian communities in Toronto Montreal and Vancouver They established a number of new organizations and affiliated newspapers women s and youth groups the most prominent of which was the Canadian League for the Liberation of Ukraine renamed the League of Ukrainian Canadians after the collapse of the USSR in 1991 The League joined the Ukrainian Canadian Committee later Ukrainian Canadian Congress as a member organization in 1959 38 Relatively few Ukrainians came to Canada during the Brezhnev and Gorbachev years as exit visas could take several years to get approved Fourth wave Post independence immigrants and recent refugees 1991 present Edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message After the dissolution of the USSR emigration from Ukraine increased Rising levels of corruption the dismantlement of some social services low paying employment and loss of jobs in Ukraine made immigration attractive once again Participation in the Canadian economy EditIn the first half of the twentieth century Ukrainian Canadians overwhelmingly earned their livings in primary industry predominantly in agriculture but also in mining logging construction and the extension of the Canadian railway system 39 most importantly as labour in completing the transcontinental mainlines of the Canadian Northern Railway and Grand Trunk Pacific both then nationalized and consolidated into the Canadian National Railway CN As agriculture became more mechanized and consolidated male Ukrainian Canadians shifted into non farm primary and secondary industry jobs while women took jobs in domestic work and unskilled service industries 40 By 1971 only slightly more Ukrainian Canadians worked in agriculture than in the wider Canadian labour force While they remain somewhat over represented in agriculture today 7 versus 4 of all working Canadians and underrepresented in elite managerial positions 39 Ukrainian Canadians have largely assimilated more into the broader economy such that the Ukrainian Canadian workforce is now similar to that of Canada as a whole in nearly all other respects 39 40 Demography EditCanadians of Ukrainian descent total population 1901 2016 Note1 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses thus population is an undercount Note2 1996 present census populations are undercounts due to the creation of the Canadian ethnic origin category Canadians of Ukrainian descent percentage of the total population 1901 2016 Note1 1981 Canadian census did not include multiple ethnic origin responses thus population is an undercount Note2 1996 present census populations are undercounts due to the creation of the Canadian ethnic origin category Population Edit Ukrainian Canadian Population History1901 2016 Year Population of total population1901 5 17 6 5 682 0 106 1911 5 17 6 75 432 1 047 1921 5 17 6 7 106 721 1 214 1931 5 17 6 7 225 113 2 169 1941 5 17 6 7 305 929 2 659 1951 5 17 6 7 395 043 2 82 1961 5 17 6 7 473 337 2 595 1971 5 17 7 580 660 2 692 1981 8 529 615 2 199 1986 9 10 961 310 3 842 1991 11 1 054 295 3 906 1996 12 1 026 475 3 598 2001 13 1 071 060 3 614 2006 14 1 209 090 3 87 2011 15 1 251 170 3 808 2016 16 1 359 655 3 946 Language Edit See also Ukrainian language Further information Canadian Ukrainian Ukrainian language street signs alongside English ones in Hafford Saskatchewan In addition to the official English and French languages many prairie public schools offer Ukrainian language education for children including immersion programs Generally second language students are taught the local Canadian Ukrainian dialect rather than Standard Ukrainian The Canadian Ukrainian dialect is based on the Ukrainian spoken by the first wave of immigrants from the Austro Hungarian Empire from 1891 to 1914 Because the Ukrainian language of this era had no words for such things as agricultural machinery other than a plow words for wildlife or vegetation common to North America and uncommon in Ukraine words related to the automobile or other self propelled vehicles on roads or words for internal combustion engine powered or electrically powered tools or home appliances of any kind extensive borrowings and adaptations from Canadian English were independently made by Ukrainian settlers in the block settlements of the Prairies during their first decades in Canada The decline of regular communication with relatives in Ukraine especially the severe restrictions between 1939 and 1989 further isolated the Western Canadian Ukrainian dialect from an evolving Ukrainian language in Soviet Ukraine Now immigrants from Ukraine to Western Canada since 1991 speaking Ukrainian find the Canadian Ukrainian dialect old fashioned and sometimes strange for modern Ukrainian no longer uses some of the expressions and vocabulary common to the Canadian dialect or in the case of the Canadian loan words and adaptations never did use because Standard Ukrainian either invented other terms or borrowed and adapted from other languages such as French German or Russian There are a few Ukrainian Catholic elementary schools in the Greater Toronto Area including St Demetrius Catholic Elementary school St Josaphat Catholic Elementary school and Josef Cardinal Slipyj Elementary school all in Etobicoke as well as St Sofia Catholic Elementary school in Mississauga 41 Religion Edit See also History of Christianity in Ukraine Further information Byzantine Rite Christianity in Canada Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Winnipeg Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada Tin Can Cathedral and Ukrainian Evangelical Baptist Convention of Canada St George s Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral Saskatoon St Volodymyr s Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral Toronto Most Ukrainians who came to Canada from Galicia were Ukrainian Catholic and those from Bukovina were Ukrainian Orthodox However people of both churches faced a shortage of priests in Canada The Ukrainian Catholic clergy came into conflict with the Roman Catholic hierarchy because they were not celibate and wanted a separate governing structure At the time the Russian Orthodox Church was the only Orthodox Christian church that operated in North America because they had arrived first via Alaska and traditionally Orthodox churches are territorially exclusive However Ukrainians in Canada were suspicious of being controlled from Russia first by the Tsarist government and later by the Soviets Partially in response to this the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada was created as a wholly Ukrainian Canadian controlled alternative As well the Ukrainian Catholic clergy were eventually given a separate structure from the Roman Church Geographical distribution EditInformation in this section taken from Statistics Canada 2016 42 Provinces amp territories Edit Province Territory Percent Ukrainian Total Ukrainians Alberta 9 3 369 090 British Columbia 5 0 229 205 Manitoba 14 5 180 055 New Brunswick 0 5 3 535 Newfoundland and Labrador 0 3 1 350 Northwest Territories 3 2 1 290 Nova Scotia 1 0 9 115 Nunavut 0 5 190 Ontario 2 8 376 440 Prince Edward Island 0 7 930 Quebec 0 5 42 550 Saskatchewan 13 4 143 700 Yukon 6 3 2 205Total 3 9 1 359 655Cities Edit City Population Ukrainian Population Percentage of Ukrainians out of total population Percentage of all Canadian UkrainiansCalgary 1 239 220 77 670 6 4 5 7 Edmonton 932 546 98 820 10 8 7 3 Hamilton 536 917 18 990 3 6 1 4 Montreal 1 704 694 18 010 1 1 1 3 Ottawa 923 243 24 965 2 7 1 8 Regina 215 106 26 590 12 6 2 0 Saskatoon 246 376 38 600 16 0 2 8 Toronto 2 721 571 72 345 2 7 5 3 Vancouver Metro Vancouver 2 463 431 94 400 3 9 6 9 Victoria 85 792 5 015 6 1 0 4 Windsor 217 188 6 165 2 9 0 5 Winnipeg 705 244 99 365 14 4 7 3 Map of the dominant self identified ethnic origins of ancestors per census division Actual physical origins of ancestors may be different Ukrainian plurality areas are highlighted in teal Note that Ukrainians are a significant minority elsewhere and that numerically most Ukrainian Canadians live in cities Information in this section taken from both 2006 Census Community Profiles and Statistics Canada 2016 The provinces with the largest Ukrainian populations single and multiple origins 2006 are Ontario 336 355 Alberta 332 180 British Columbia 197 265 Manitoba 167 175 Saskatchewan 129 265 and Quebec 31 955 In terms of proportion of the total population the most Ukrainian provinces and territories are Manitoba 15 Saskatchewan 13 Alberta 10 Yukon 5 British Columbia 5 and Ontario 3 The metropolitan regions with the largest Ukrainian populations single and multiple origins 2006 are Edmonton 144 620 Toronto 122 510 Winnipeg 110 335 Vancouver 81 725 Calgary 76 240 Saskatoon 38 825 Hamilton 27 080 Montreal 26 150 Regina 25 725 Ottawa Gatineau 21 520 St Catharines Niagara 20 990 Thunder Bay 17 620 Victoria 15 020 Kelowna 13 425 Oshawa 12 555 London 10 765 and Kitchener 10 425 The Census Divisions with the largest percentage of Ukrainians single and multiple origins 2006 are Manitoba 12 25 Alberta 10 20 Alberta 12 19 Manitoba 11 15 Manitoba 7 13 Manitoba 10 12 Manitoba 9 12 Manitoba 2 10 There are a number of smaller rural communities in Western Canada with significant proportions of Ukrainians single and multiple origins 2016 including Canora Saskatchewan 52 6 Speers Saskatchewan 50 Andrew Alberta 48 Mundare Alberta 46 Bradwell Saskatchewan 41 Vilna Alberta 40 Smoky Lake Alberta 39 Hafford Saskatchewan 39 43 Culture EditSee also Ukrainian culture Having been separated from Ukraine Ukrainian Canadians have developed their own distinctive Ukrainian culture in Canada To showcase their unique hybrid culture Ukrainian Canadians have created institutions that showcase Ukrainian Canadian culture such as Edmonton s Cheremosh and Shumka troupes among the world s elite Ukrainian dancers or the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village where Ukrainian pioneer buildings are displayed along with extensive cultural exhibits Ukrainian Canadians have also contributed to Canadian culture as a whole Actress and comedian Luba Goy singer Gloria Kaye 44 Jeopardy host Alex Trebek hockey executive Kyle Dubas and painter William Kurelek for example are well known outside the Ukrainian community Perhaps one of the most lasting contributions Ukrainian Canadians have made to the wider culture of Canada is the concept of multiculturalism 40 45 which was promoted as early as 1963 by Senator Paul Yuzyk 45 During and after the debates surrounding the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism Ukrainian leaders such as linguist Jaroslav Rudnyckyj came out in force against the idea of English French biculturalism 45 which they believed denied the contributions other peoples had made to Canada Partly in response to this Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau shifted Canada to a policy of official multiculturalism notably the day after the Canadian Multiculturalism Policy of 1971 was officially announced Trudeau gave a forceful speech in support of the policy at a national assembly of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress in Winnipeg 45 Architecture Edit See also Vernacular architecture of the Carpathians The Western Ukrainian agricultural settlers brought with them a style of folk architecture dominated by buildings made of unprocessed logs which were much better suited to the wooded parkland belt rather than the bald prairie The first house built usually a burdei used some sod but was not exactly a sod hut more like a dugout The second house was often a white washed and plastered log cabin usually with thatched roof very similar to those seen in Ukraine Barns chicken coops granaries and so on were all built using the same techniques as the houses By the 1930s most Ukrainian Canadians adopted the building styles of the North American mainstream including framed homes and barns built from commercial plans and using milled lumber Early churches built by pioneer farmers rather than trained builders were basically log cabins with a few added decorations They aspired to the designs of Ukraine s wooden churches but were much more humble Latter churches such as the prairie cathedral style of Father Philip Ruh using a mixture of Byzantine and Western influences were much more decorative Politics Edit Many Ukrainians fled Russia Poland 37 and later the Soviet Union to find freedom and a better life in Canada For them Canada became an anti Russia where they could realize their political and economic ideas Most Ukrainian Canadians were anti Soviet yet a minor group of Ukrainians has since 1910 supported Canadian socialism and contributed to the formation of the Communist Party of Canada and formed a significant bloc within that group They were also active in other Marxist organizations like the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association ULFTA Ukrainians also played a central role in the 1930s formation of the Co operative Commonwealth Federation CCF and the 1960s formation of the New Democratic Party Ukrainians were a notable portion of the Mackenzie Papineau Battalion of Canadians who volunteered and fought in the Spanish Civil War on the side of the leftist republican government against the nationalist troops of Generalisimo Francisco Franco Ukrainians in Canada at first supported the Liberal Party federally and provincially a minority moved towards the 1930s protest parties of Social Credit and the CCF federally and provincially The vocal anti communism of John Diefenbaker in the 1950s led the more nationalist minded to support the federal Progressive Conservatives Today s Ukrainian community tends to vote based on economic class interests and regional preferences 46 The nationalist movement through the Ukrainian National Federation and the Canadian League for the Liberation of Ukraine was also an important part of the community After Ukraine became independent Canada was one of the first nations to recognize Ukraine From 1992 to 1994 Ukrainian Canadians were vital in fundraising to purchase a building in Ottawa to house the Embassy of Ukraine As well Canada has recognized the Holodomor Ukrainian Famine as an act of genocide Canada also sent many observers to Ukraine during the disputed 2004 presidential election see Orange Revolution The Government of Canada as well as its provincial governments especially the Ukrainian strongholds in Alberta Manitoba and Saskatchewan do much to support Ukraine s economic and political development The Ukrainian Canadians had and have much more influence in Canadian society and policy than any other East European group therefore they have had several prominent figures in top positions Ray Hnatyshyn was the 24th Governor General of Canada 1990 1995 and the first Governor General of Ukrainian descent Ukrainians were also elected leaders of Canada s prairie provinces Gary Filmon was Premier of Manitoba 1988 1999 nearly simultaneously with Hnatyshyn and Roy Romanow was Premier of Saskatchewan 1991 2001 also partly at the same time as Filmon and Hnatyshyn 47 Ed Stelmach became Premier of Alberta in 2006 as the third provincial premier of Ukrainian descent He succeeded Ralph Klein 1992 2006 who had cabinets with many Ukrainian ministers Stelmach himself is the grandson of Ukrainian immigrants and speaks fluent Ukrainian 47 He left office in October 2011 Chrystia Freeland the Liberal Deputy Prime Minister of Canada is of Ukrainian descent and speaks Ukrainian Rona Ambrose nee Chapchuk who was Leader of the Opposition and interim Conservative party leader from 2015 to 2017 is of Ukrainian descent Arts Edit See also Ukrainian dance A Ukrainian dance troupe at the BC Ukrainian Cultural Festival In 1974 what was then the world s largest pysanka was erected in Vegreville Alberta commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police It has since been exceeded by a pysanka built in Ukraine Canada is home to some very vibrant Ukrainian dance groups Some examples of Ukrainian dance ensembles in Canada are the Ukrainian Shumka Dancers and the Cheremosh Ukrainian Dance Company in Edmonton the Rusalka Ukrainian Dance Ensemble and Rozmai Ukrainian Dance Company in Winnipeg the Svitanok Ukrainian Dance Ensemble in Ottawa and hundreds of other groups The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko provides some financial support for Ukrainian Canadian performing literary and visual arts Ukrainians in general are noted for their elaborately decorated Easter Eggs or pysanky and that is also true in Canada The world s second largest pysanka is in Vegreville Alberta Ukrainian Canadian churches are also famous for their onion domes which have elaborately painted murals on their interior and for their iconostasis or icon walls Music Edit Ukrainian Canadian musicians and groups include Randy Bachman the Canadian Bandurist Capella Ron Cahute Rick Danko Victor Mishalow Chantal Kreviazuk Gordie Johnson Canadian Idol season 2 runner up Theresa Sokyrka Zirka from Toronto and Rushnychok from Montreal The Edmonton based group the Kubasonics focuses on a folk fusion of traditional Ukrainian music with modern touches Food Edit See also Ukrainian cuisine Cultural food is an important part of Ukrainian culture Special foods used at Easter as well as Christmas are not made at any other time of the year In fact on Christmas Eve January 6 N 4 in the Gregorian calendar a special twelve dish meatless meal is served The best known foods are borshch a vegetable soup usually with beets holobtsi cabbage rolls pyrohy or varenyky dumplings often called perogies and kovbasa sausage Several items of Ukrainian food and culture have been enshrined with roadside attractions throughout the Prairie provinces These are celebrated in the polka Giants of the Prairies by the Kubasonics For example the world s largest perogy is in Glendon Alberta 50 and the world s biggest kovbasa is in Mundare Alberta 51 Institutions Edit There are a number of Ukrainian Canadian institutions such as the Ukrainian Canadian Congress a national umbrella organization established in 1940 represents the Ukrainian Canadian community The UCC has branches and provincial councils across the country and has dozens of member organizations The UCC leads and represents the Ukrainian Canadian community to the government of Canada and to the provincial governments the Ukrainian National Federation of Canada the largest Ukrainian Canadian organization founded in Edmonton in 1932 to unite Ukrainian Canadians on a non sectarian basis for the prime objectives of preserving Ukrainian language and culture in Canada promoting good citizenship and supporting the establishment of an independent and democratic Ukrainian state The UNF is a member of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association an independent group dedicated to the articulation and defence of the Ukrainian Canadian community s interests the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians the main pro Communist cultural association the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies jointly at the University of Alberta in Edmonton and the University of Toronto St Andrew s College the seminary of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada affiliated with the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg and a non profit university student residence Ukrainian culture summer school and youth hostel the Ukrainian Museum of Canada based in Saskatoon with branches in the other major cities of western Canada Winnipeg Regina Edmonton Calgary and Vancouver and Toronto the Ukrainian Cultural and Educational Centre also known as Oseredok in Winnipeg the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village a living history museum approximately 39 kilometres east of Edmonton the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko Shevchenko Foundation based in Winnipeg provides some financial support through grants for Ukrainian Canadian performing literary and visual arts the Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies at the University of Manitoba the Ukrainian Cultural Centre of Toronto UCCT the Kule Folklore Centre 52 at the University of Alberta the Ukrainian Canadian Archives amp Museum of Alberta in Edmonton the Prairie Centre for the Study of Ukrainian Heritage at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon the Kobzar Literary Award a biennial literary award that recognizes outstanding contributions to Canadian literary arts by authors who develop a Ukrainian Canadian theme with literary merit 53 the St Petro Mohyla Institute in Saskatoon a non profit university student residence Ukrainian culture summer school and youth hostel the Ukrainian Canadian Students Union SUSK SUSK a national organization of students at post secondary institutions the Canadian Ukrainian Immigrant Aid Society a community agency providing settlement assistance for newcomers to Canada Ukrainian Canadian Social Services 54 a community agency providing nutritional and financial assistance to newly arrived immigrants and Ukrainian Canadian senior citizens the Taras Shevchenko Museum 55 in Toronto the Ivan Franko Museum inside the Ukrainian Labour Temple of WinnipegGallery Edit Dr Joseph Oleskow in 1896 before his second voyage to Canada Ukrainian Museum of Canada Saskatoon Ukrainian Museum of Canada workers in traditional dress outside the Saskatoon museum Ukrainian Cultural and Educational Centre Oseredok Winnipeg A Ukrainian folk music orchestra associated with the then Mykhailo Hrushevsky Institute of Edmonton now known as St John s Institute St Petro Mohyla Institute Saskatoon St Vladimir Institute Toronto Former Sheptytsky Institute building at Saint Paul University in OttawaSee also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ukrainian diaspora in Canada List of Ukrainian Canadians List of Canadian place names of Ukrainian origin Canada Ukraine relations European Canadians Toronto Ukrainian Genealogy GroupNotes Edit Ukrainian Ukrayinski kanadci Ukrayinokanadci romanized Ukrains ki kanadtsi Ukrainokanadtsi French Canadiens d origine ukrainienne Dr Oleskow who had a PhD in agronomy wrote two pamphlets About Free Lands Pro Vilni Zemli spring 1895 and On Emigration O emigratsiy December 1895 which were widely read in the Prosvita halls of the Ukrainian areas of the Austrian Empire The UCC was the driving force in organizing the global umbrella World Congress of Free Ukrainians in the immediate postwar period the WCFU would expand and be renamed the Ukrainian World Congress after the dissolution of the Soviet Union Because Ukrainian Canadians are the largest Eastern Christian group in Canada January 6 7 is commonly referred by Canadians of all origins as Ukrainian Christmas 48 49 Footnotes Edit a b Statistics Canada October 25 2017 2016 National Household Survey Data tables Retrieved April 2 2018 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1863 Martynowych 2011 Swyripa Canada p 348 2006 Census Community Profiles see for example Division No 12 Manitoba National Household Survey Profile Canada 2011 a b c d e f g h i Government of Canada Statistics Canada July 29 1999 Historical statistics of Canada section A Population and migration ARCHIVED www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b c d e f g h Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1961 Census of Canada population vol I part 2 1961 Recensement du Canada population vol I partie 2 Ethnic groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b c d e f g Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1971 Census of Canada population vol I part 3 Recensement du Canada 1971 population vol I partie 3 Ethnic groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1981 Census of Canada volume 1 national series population Recensement du Canada de 1981 volume 1 serie nationale population Ethnic origin www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Census Canada 1986 Profile of ethnic groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1986 Census of Canada Ethnic Diversity In Canada www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1991 Census The nation Ethnic origin www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada June 4 2019 Data tables 1996 Census Population by Ethnic Origin 188 and Sex 3 Showing Single and Multiple Responses 3 for Canada Provinces Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas 1996 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada December 23 2013 Ethnic Origin 232 Sex 3 and Single and Multiple Responses 3 for Population for Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2001 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada May 1 2020 Ethnic Origin 247 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 and Sex 3 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada January 23 2019 Ethnic Origin 264 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 Generation Status 4 Age Groups 10 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2011 National Household Survey www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada June 17 2019 Ethnic Origin 279 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 Generation Status 4 Age 12 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 23 2022 a b Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 Canadian census 1871 a b Kukushkin p 30 54 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 3 a b c Isajiw and Makuch p 333 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 The Quebec History Encyclopedia Clifford Sifton faculty marianopolis edu Retrieved January 8 2017 a b c Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 18 Isajiw and Makuch p 346 47 345 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1863 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 18 Isajiw and Makuch p 346 47 345 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1863 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 19 Isajiw and Makuch p 346 48 Satzewich V 2004 The Ukrainian Diaspora Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780203217498 Retrieved January 8 2017 Allahar A Cote J E 1998 Richer and Poorer The Structure of Inequality in Canada James Lorimer Limited Publishers p 70 ISBN 9781550286106 Retrieved January 8 2017 Subtelny Orest 2000 Ukraine A History University of Toronto Press p 547 ISBN 9780802083906 Retrieved January 8 2017 100 years since first death in Kapuskasing internment camp Sudbury CBC News June 3 2015 Retrieved June 4 2015 a b PM Reaches out to Ukrainians The Globe and Mail August 25 2005 About the Fund official website The Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund and The Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko 2012 Retrieved April 15 2014 Swyripa Canada p 344 a b Isajiw and Makuch p 333 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 Isajiw and Makuch p 346 47 345 Swyripa Canada p 351 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 18 Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 Isajiw and Makuch p 346 48 345 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 18 Swyripa Canada p 351 52 a b Swyripa Ukrainians p 1862 63 Swyripa Canada p 352 Luciuk and Kordan 1989 map 18 a b c Ukrainians of Canada Encyclopedia com Cengage Group Retrieved April 2 2022 a b c Swyripa Frances A Lambert Maude Emmanuelle December 10 2021 Ukrainian Canadians The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved April 2 2022 Callan Isaac Rocca Ryan April 6 2022 Students attend Toronto Ukrainian schools after fleeing war with Russia Global Toronto Retrieved December 17 2022 2016 Census of Canada Topic based tabulations Ethnic Origin 247 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 and Sex 3 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada January 11 2020 Retrieved January 11 2020 Government of Canada Statistics Canada February 8 2017 Census Profile 2016 Census www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved April 18 2022 Czuboka p 211 212 a b c d Cuenco Michael Spring 2021 A Tale of Two Immigration Systems Canada and the United States American Affairs American Affairs Foundation Inc V 1 Swyripa Canada p 348 a b Hans Joachim Hoppe in German Ukrainian vastnesses Canada was and is for many East Europeans a country of prophecy in Neue Zurcher Zeitung no 211 September 12 13 2009 p B3 Popeski Ron January 6 2016 Opinion Should Ukrainians do away with Ukrainian Christmas CBC Manitoba Retrieved December 28 2017 Joyous family celebration marks Ukrainian Christmas Winnipeg Sun Retrieved January 8 2017 Giant Perogy Glendon Canada Atlas Obscura The World s Largest Sausage Mundare Canada Atlas Obscura University of Alberta Press Kule Folklore Centre About the Award Kobzar Book Award website Retrieved May 28 2014 Ukrainian Canadian Social Services Infoukes com Taras Shevchenko Museum the only Shevchenko Museum in the Americas References EditSwyripa Frances A 1985 Ukrainians In Mel Hurtig ed The Canadian Encyclopedia Vol 3 1st ed Edmonton Alberta Hurtig Publishers p 1863 ISBN 0 88830 272 X In 1981 only 30 0 and 18 6 of Ukrainian Canadians belonged to the Ukrainian Catholic and Ukrainian Orthodox churches respectively 16 8 were Roman Catholic and 13 3 United Church adherents Martynowych Orest 2011 The Seraphimite Independent Greek Presbyterian and United Churches Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies University of Manitoba Swyripa Frances 1984 Canada In Volodymyr Kubiyovych ed Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 1 A F Toronto University of Toronto Press p 352 ISBN 0 8020 3362 8 A unique religious experiment originated with a Russian Orthodox priest S Ustvolsky As the monk Seraphim self proclaimed bishop and metropolitan of the Orthodox Russian church for America he arrived in Canada in 1903 and began to ordain priests In 1904 alarmed by Seraphim s growing eccentricities several priests led by I Bodrug broke with him and formed the Ruthenian Independent Greek church The new church retained the Eastern rite and liturgy but was supervised and financially supported by the Presbyterian church with which Bodrug had contacts At its height the Independent Greek Church claimed 60 000 adherents It declined after 1907 when Presbyterian pressure forced genuine Protestant reform it became part of the Presbyterian church and then of the United church Bodrug remained within the Ukrainian evangelical movement working closely with theUkrainian Evangelical Alliance in North America est 1922 In 1931 1 6 percent of Ukrainian Canadians were United church adherents By 1971 intermarriage and assimilation had increased the figure to 13 9 percent the fourth largest denomination among Ukrainian Canadians Swyripa Frances A 1985 Ukrainians In Mel Hurtig ed The Canadian Encyclopedia Vol 3 1st ed Edmonton Alberta Hurtig Publishers p 1862 ISBN 0 88830 272 X Isolated individuals of Ukrainian background may have come to Canada during theWar of 1812as mercenaries in thede Meuronand de Watteville regiments It is possible that others participated in Russian exploration and colonization on the West Coast came withMennoniteand other German immigrants in the 1870s or entered Canada from the US United States ed Luciuk Lubomyr Kordan Bohdan 1989 Creating a Landscape A Geography of Ukrainians in Canada Toronto University of Toronto Press p Map 3 ISBN 0 8020 5823 X Only about one fifth of the Ukrainians in Canada would come from Ukrainian lands controlled by the tsarist empire until 1917 and by the Soviets thereafter Isajiw Wsevolod Makuch Andrij 1994 Ukrainians in Canada In Ann Lencyk Pawliczko ed Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World Toronto University of Toronto Press p 333 ISBN 0 8020 0595 0 Because most of the free lands available for agricultural settlement had already been granted to earlier immigrants the incoming population tended not to establish themselves as farmers A substantial number settled in the Prairie provinces and worked as farm hands while some took advantage of land grants being offered in the northern Peace River region of Alberta Eventually some of these immigrants did start up their own farming operations in and around the main areas of Ukrainian settlement The majority of Ukrainians in this second wave however worked as labourers in the mining and forestry regions of northern Ontario and in the cities of central Canada and the Prairies A small portion of the incoming immigration consisted of individuals with a higher level of education than that possessed by the earlier immigrants affording them the opportunity to exact a different entry level status Among this group were skilled individuals who could assume critical positions in the Ukrainian press and the community s cultural educational institutions Swyripa Frances A 1985 Ukrainians In Mel Hurtig ed The Canadian Encyclopedia Vol 3 1st ed Edmonton Alberta Hurtig Publishers p 1862 ISBN 0 88830 272 X Between the 2 world wars some 70 000 Ukrainians immigrated to Canada for political and economic reasons They included war veterans intellectuals and professionals as well as peasants Swyripa Frances 1984 Canada In Volodymyr Kubiyovych ed Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 1 A F Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 351 52 ISBN 0 8020 3362 8 Interwar immigrants introduced a number of new organizations The paramilitary sporting Sitch sic renamed theCanadian Sitch Organizationin 1928 was founded in 1924 with official support from the Ukrainian Catholic church It declined with the appearance of the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood and in 1934 was reorganized without church backing as theUnited Hetman Organization a conservative monarchist movement that favored P Skoropadsky as hetman of Ukraine After the death of his son D Skoropadsky in 1957 the movement never too popular rapidly declined In 1928 the republican inclined veterans of the Ukrainian independence struggle formed theUkrainian War Veterans Association UWVA In 1932 it provided the base for theUkrainian National Federation which espoused the militant nationalism of theOrganization of Ukrainian Nationalists Swyripa Frances A 1985 Ukrainians In Mel Hurtig ed The Canadian Encyclopedia Vol 3 1st ed Edmonton Alberta Hurtig Publishers pp 1862 63 ISBN 0 88830 272 X National organizations emerged in the interwar years The procommunist Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association est 1924 attracted the unemployed in the 1930s The Ukrainian Self Reliance League est 1927 and the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood est 1932 represented Orthodox and Catholic laity respectively Organizations introduced by the second immigration reflected Ukrainian revolutionary trends in Europe The small conservative monarchical United Hetman Organization est 1934 was counterbalanced by the influential nationalistic republican Ukrainian National Federation est 1932 Despite tensions all groups publicized Polish pacification and Stalinist terror in Ukraine in the 1930s only the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association condoned the Soviet purges and the artificial famine of 1932 33 that killed 6 million people its successor the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians est 1946 has declined steadily Swyripa Frances 1984 Canada In Volodymyr Kubiyovych ed Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 1 A F Toronto University of Toronto Press p 352 ISBN 0 8020 3362 8 During the 1930s there was considerable friction between the Canadian oriented Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood and Ukrainian Self Reliance League and such Ukraine oriented organizations as the Ukrainian National Federation In spite of rivalries Ukrainian Canadian organizations gave moral and financial assistance to Ukrainian emigre centers in Western Europe and to Ukrainian veterans war orphans and numerous causes in Poland and neighboring countries In the 1930s Polish pacification in Western Ukraine and Stalinist terror in the Soviet Union were widely publicized The ULFTA which extolled the Soviet Ukrainian state and especially its cultural flowering in the 1920s failed to question the purges forced collectivization and artificial famine of the 1930s Czuboka Michael 1983 Ukrainian Canadian Eh The Ukrainians of Canada and Elsewhere As Perceived By Themselves And Others Winnipeg Manitoba Communigraphics Printers Aid Group pp 211 12 ISBN 0 920073 00 X Gloria Kaye was born in northern Alberta as Gloria Slavka Kolmatycki on March 10 1956 the youngest of five children of Mike and Annie Kolmatycki Kolmatycki changed her Ukrainian name to Kaye for ease in handling As Gloria Kaye she sang on Canadian television on the Tommy Hunter Show It s Happening Show of the Week Juliette Music Hop Robbie Lane and the Merv Griffin show in the United States Swyripa Frances 1984 Canada In Volodymyr Kubiyovych ed Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 1 A F Toronto University of Toronto Press p 348 ISBN 0 8020 3362 8 For many years Ukrainians supported the Liberal party which was in power when they first arrived Together with other Canadians from the lower socioeconomic strata Ukrainians have shown considerable support for Canadian protest parties which emerged in the 1930s the Social Credit party and the Co operative Commonwealth Federation subsequently the New Democratic party During the Great Depression the Ukrainians Jews and Finns were the most prominent ethnic groups within theCommunist Party of Canada In the late 1950s many Ukrainians turned to the Progressive Conservative party approving J Diefenbaker s anticommunism and his appointment of the first Ukrainian Canadian to the federal cabinet Increasingly the voting habits of Ukrainians reflect their economic class or region rather than any common ethnic pattern Further reading EditHoppe Hans Joachim Ukraine s conflict and the Ukrainian diaspora in Canada Kyiv Post September 5 2015 Kordan Bohdan and Luciuk Lubomyr eds 1986 A Delicate and Difficult Question Documents in the History of Ukrainians in Canada 1899 1962 Kingston Limestone Press ISBN 0 919642 08 X Kordan Bohdan 2000 Ukrainian Canadians and the Canada Census 1981 1996 Saskatoon Heritage Press ISBN 0 88880 422 9 Kordan Bohdan 2001 Canada and the Ukrainian Question 1939 1945 Montreal Kingston McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 2230 1 Kukushkin Vadim 2007 From Peasants to Labourers Ukrainian and Belarusian Immigration from the Russian Empire to Canada Montreal McGill Queen s University Press excerpt and text search Kulyk Keefer Janice 2005 Dark Ghost in the Corner Imagining Ukrainian Canadian Identity Saskatoon Heritage Press ISBN 0 88880 497 0 Luciuk Kassandra Spring 2019 More Dangerous Than Many a Pamphlet or Propaganda Book The Ukrainian Canadian Left Theatre and Propaganda in the 1920s Labour Le Travail Canadian Committee on Labour History 89 77 104 doi 10 1353 llt 2019 0003 JSTOR 26741322 S2CID 164950170 Luciuk Lubomyr and Kordan Bohdan 1989 Creating a Landscape A Geography of Ukrainians in Canada Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 5823 X Luciuk Lubomyr and Hryniuk Stella eds 1991 Canada s Ukrainians Negotiating an Identity Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 5978 3 Luciuk Lubomyr Y 2000 Searching For Place Ukrainian Displaced Persons Canada and the Migration of Memory University of Toronto Press doi 10 3138 9781442679672 ISBN 0 8020 8088 X Lupul Manoly ed 1984 Visible Symbols Cultural Expression Among Canada s Ukrainians Edmonton Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press ISBN 0 920862 27 6 Lupul Manoly 1982 A Heritage in Transition Essays on the History of Ukrainians in Canada Martynowych Orest 1991 Ukrainians in Canada The formative period 1891 1924 Edmonton Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press ISBN 0 920862 76 4 Martynowych Orest ed 2011 Ukrainian Canadian History 1891 Present A List of English language Secondary Sources Monographs Book chapters Collections Articles Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies University of Manitoba Melnycky Peter Canadians and Ukrainians Inseparably Recent Writing on the History of Ukrainian Settlement in Canada Manitoba History Number 24 Autumn 1992 online edition historiography Petelycky Stefan 1999 Into Auschwitz For Ukraine Kingston Kyiv Kashtan Press ISBN 1 896354 16 5 online edition Prymak Thomas M 1988 Maple Leaf and Trident The Ukrainian Canadians During the Second World War Toronto Multicultural History Society of Ontario Satzewich Vic 2002 The Ukrainian Diaspora Routledge ISBN 0 415 29658 7 Swyripa Frances 1993 Wedded to the Cause Ukrainian Canadian Women and Ethnic Identity 1891 1991 Swyripa Frances 1999 Ukrainians Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples Toronto Multicultural History Society of Ontario Swyripa Frances and John Herd Thompson eds 1983 Loyalties in Conflict Ukrainians in Canada During the Great War 213pp 8 essays by scholars Yuzyk Paul The First Ukrainians in Manitoba Manitoba Historical Society Transactions Series 3 1951 52 online Zav yalov A V Socialna adaptaciya ukrayinskih immigrantiv monografiya A V Zav yalov Kiyiv Samit kniga 2020 180 s in Ukrainian External links EditUkrainian Canadian Congress Ukrainian diaspora in Canada and U S Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund Ukrainian Museum of Canada in Saskatoon Ukrainian Cultural and Educational Centre Oseredok Winnipeg Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Kule Folklore Centre at the University of Alberta Ukrainian Language Education Centre University of Alberta Edmonton Ukrainian Canadian Archives amp Museum of Alberta Edmonton Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village Alberta Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies University of Manitoba Winnipeg Canadian Ukrainian Immigrant Aid Society Ukrainian Canadian Social Services The John Luczkiw Collection University of Toronto The Ukrainian Collection of the University of Calgary Taras Shevchenko Museum in Toronto Final Report of the 1985 1986 Deschenes Commission Portals Canada Ukraine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ukrainian Canadians amp oldid 1138375639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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