The First Ukrainians in Manitoba
by Paul
Yuzyk
MHS Transactions Series 3, 1951-52 season
The summer and fall of 1951 was the occasion of the sixtieth
anniversary of Ukrainian settlement in Canada. The outstanding
celebrations of the Ukrainian Canadian Diamond jubilee were held
under the distinguished patronage of Their Excellencies the Governor
General and the Viscountess Alexander of Tunis. The sponsor in the
prominent Ukrainian communities, which dot our country from
Vancouver to Montreal and contain a population of over 400,000 of
these people, was the Ukrainian Canadian Committee, a coordinating
body of the dominion-wide Ukrainian organizations (excluding the
pro-communist element).
Considerable prominence was given in Canadian circles to this
important event. The Prime Minister of Canada, Louis St. Laurent,
made a tour of several important pioneer localities. The
Lieutenant-Governors and Premiers of some of the provinces as well
as many Canadian leaders participated in the celebrations. The
newspapers and magazines ran accounts with illustrations of the
achievements of this significant ethnic group; the Winnipeg
Tribune also published a separate dedicatory issue. The Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, in a half-hour programme, dramatized the
history of the Ukrainian Canadians, and the Voice of Canada (C.B.C.
International Service) transmitted in Ukrainian three radio talks,
given by the author of this paper, on the occasion to the people in
Ukraine. [1]
The crowning celebrations were held on September 7, 8, and 9 in
Winnipeg, which contains 41,500 Ukrainians (1951 census), is the
centre of Ukrainian life in Canada, and is often referred to as the
Ukrainian Canadian capital. The first day featured a
beautifully-arranged display of the cultural achievements. The
largest Ukrainian hall became a museum of Ukrainian folk art,
consisting of handicrafts, Easter eggs, inlaid wooden articles and
ceramics, of selected works of modern art, and of Ukrainian
newspapers, books and magazines published in Canada. President A. H.
S. Gillson of the University of Manitoba officially opened the
exhibition. September 8 witnessed a parade to the Legislative
Building. Here the Lieutenant-Governor, the Honourable R. F.
McWilliams, officially unveiled a memorial plaque, which stands in
the hallway opposite the legislative library. The following words
are inscribed on the tablet: "Dedicated to the pioneer Ukrainian
settlers on the occasion of their sixtieth anniversary in
recognition of their contribution to the development of Canada."
In the evening of September 8 a commemorative concert was held at
the Playhouse Theatre in Winnipeg. Typical Ukrainian items, such as
choral and instrumental music, as well as fast-moving folk-dancing,
reminded the audience of the Ukrainian contribution to Canadian life
in these fields. In an impressive ceremony, honour was paid to
fifteen elderly pioneer men and women. At the banquet on September
10, Professor W. L. Morton, chairman of the History Department at
the University, gave a concluding speech, entitled "The Common
Heritage." The Jubilee came to an end with the closing of the
Ukrainian exhibit, during which Professor L. Bilecky delivered an
address on the future of Ukrainian culture in Canada. [2]
This jubilee brought to the minds of Canadians the place that
Ukrainians hold in the life of the country. This largest Slavic
group in Canada, which outnumbers all the rest of the Slavs
combined, constitutes over ten per cent. of the population in the
three prairie provinces. The largest proportion of these people
inhabit our own province of Manitoba, where they form nearly
thirteen per cent [3]
of the population (approximately one person out of every eight),
exceeded only by the English and the Scotch. Members of this group
have been taking an increasing part in the political life in Canada.
In Manitoba there are six members of Ukrainian origin sitting in the
legislative assembly, one of whom is the speaker of the house, and
they have been electing reeves, mayors, councillors, and aldermen in
eighteen municipalities. While the largest proportion of Ukrainians
are engaged in agriculture, which is their greatest single
contribution to the province, increasingly larger numbers are found
in business, manufacturing, the trades, and in the various
professions, in fact in all walks of life. They are active in music
circles, mainly in choral music, but many prominent musicians have
also won laurels. Newspapers and books in the vernacular are
published by them in considerable quantity. The study of Ukrainian
is featured prominently at the prairie universities, Manitoba having
a Department of Slavic Studies. The people are readily identified by
their distinctive Byzantine-style, bulbous-domed churches, which are
under the jurisdiction either of an Orthodox metropolitan or a Greek
Catholic archbishop, and by the numerous community halls, which are
active in cultural work and social activities. In spite of Soviet
Russia's keen interest in this leading Slavic group in Canada, which
was very evident during the Jubilee celebration, the Ukrainian
Canadians are staunch, loyal, and constructive citizens of Canada,
which was manifest in their whole-hearted support of the last war
effort, even though they often bitterly denounced the alliance with
the Soviet Union.
The jubilee reminds us that the first Ukrainian settlers [4]
came to Canada in the year 1891. It is probable that some had
entered the country before that date, but so far we possess no
authentic record of such. The earliest available records reveal that
Ivan Pillipiw and Wasyl Eleniak were on board the steamship Oregon
which had left Liverpool on August 28, 1891 and landed at Montreal
on September 7. Brief stories of their lives have appeared in the
Ukrainian language, as well as in English. Eleniak [5]
is still living on his original homestead near Chipman, Alberta, a
fairly prosperous farmer, now ninety-three years of age. The real
leader of the Ukrainian immigration to Canada was Ivan Pillipiw [6],
who died in 1936 at the age of seventy-seven, as a result of an
accident, at which time he was a prosperous farmer, also on his
original homestead near Lamont, Alberta.
Both of these hardy Ukrainian farmers came from Nebiliv, a
village comprising some six hundred homes on the eastern foothills
of the Carpathian mountains, in Galicia, which at the time was under
the rule of the Habsburgs. The initiative came from Pillipiw, who
had a public school education. Like the majority of his fellow
countrymen, he was unable to eke out a living from his small plot of
land. With a growing family and had crops, Pillipiw was forced to do
seasonal work in Hungary. It was while he was engaged in a contract
job of supplying the Austrian government with wood that he learnt
from German colonists who worked for him and had relatives in
Canada, that free lands could be secured in this country. He wrote a
letter to a Mennonite family in Canada, which answered that there
were plenty of free lands and that with a bit of hard work, it was
easy to become prosperous. Pillipiw was determined to see Canada for
himself. He was able to persuade his friend, Wasyl Eleniak, and his
brother-in-law, Yurko Panischak to go with him. By selling a pair of
horses and oxen, Pillipiw raised 600 rinskies, approximately
$240.00, while Eleniak raised 190 rinskies ($76.00) and Panishchak
got only 120 rinskies ($48.00). At the border town of Oswiencim,
Panischak was turned back by the officials as not having sufficient
money. The other two men continued to Hamburg, where they secured
passports and passages to Winnipeg, and sailed on the Oregon, as
mentioned in the preceding paragraph. It was a momentous step for
the two humble rustics. Their example was soon followed by thousands
of their own people.
Having arrived in Winnipeg, probably on September 9 or 10 (1891),
the two adventurers came in contact with an immigration agent of
German origin who spoke Ukrainian. They were taken to a German
settlement in Langenburg, not far from Yorkton. Here Pillipiw found
se oral Germans who had worked for him in the old country. After a
week's stay in Langenburg, the two immigrants decided to file for
homesteads. Upon their return to Winnipeg, they were advised to view
the new lands opening up in the Calgary region. They made the trip
but were not pleased with the open prairies, for they considered
forests essential for firewood and building. Again they came back to
Winnipeg, and this time went to the Mennonite settlement at Gretna,
on the southern border of Manitoba. Finding the Mennonites
prosperous and the land partially wooded, Pillipiw and Eleniak were
overjoyed at the prospects. They immediately decided to settle on
land in the Gretna district.
Pillipiw chose to return to his native village to sell his land
and bring back his family, and also Eleniak's, while his companion
remained at Gretna. Pillipiw left Winnipeg on December 15. At
Hamburg, he made an agreement with a steamship agent, Shapiro, to
secure passages to Canada for his friends, for which Pillipiw would
receive the standard rate of five dollars for each head of a family
and an additional two dollars for each other individual.
Pillipiw arrived in Nehiliv on January 12, 1892, during the
Christmas season. His glowing reports of the free lands and
opportunities in Canada, spread like wild-fire throughout his and
the neighbouring villages. He urged the debt-ridden peasants to
settle in the new country, which also guaranteed freedom to all
individuals. In the spring, when several families were preparing for
the journey to Canada, the Austrian police arrested Pillipiw and put
him on trial, ostensibly for fraud in connection with overseas
passages, but in reality for agitation among the country folk to
leave the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which meant the loss of cheap
labour and young men for service in the military forces. Pillipiw's
punishment was a prison term of one month, which actually amounted
to over three months since the day of his arrest. The prison
sentence, however, did not serve as a deterrent. The trial turned
out to be a public advertisement, by which news of the wonderful
opportunities that Canada offered quickly spread to all corners of
the Ukrainian lands under Austria.
In spite of governmental obstruction, nothing could stop those
who set their minds on reaching the New World. The first group of
emigrants from Nebiliv and the neighbouring village of Perehinsk
consisted of seven families [7]
and an unmarried youth. These are the names of the men: Wasyl Yaciw,
Karl Paish and his single brother, Joseph, Anton Kowal, Wasyl
Petryn, Michael Kremeniw, Adam Rawynsky, and Karl Hrushka, all of
whom had sold their property to pay for the long trip of
approximately 6,000 miles. They left their native land forever in
June, 1892, when Pillipiw's trial was still in progress. All of this
group, upon arrival in Winnipeg, tried to get to Wasyl Eleniak at
Gretna, but had to return from Rosenfeld, for Gretna was under
quarantine due to an outbreak of small-pox. Soon after, all of the
group, except Yaciw and his wife, went to Edmonton and finally
settled in the Beaver Lake district close to present-day Vegreville,
which became the nucleus for a large Ukrainian colony in
Alberta.
At this point, it might be of interest to follow through the
story of the life of the first Ukrainian resident of Winnipeg, and
Manitoba. Of the first group of Ukrainian settlers in Canada, Wasyl
Yaciw, age 29, and his wife, Mary, age 23, who had sold their
six-acre farm in Nebiliv, found themselves with only forty dollars
when they came to Winnipeg.8 This sum was not enough to pay for
their transportation to Edmonton and so they decided to remain in
Manitoba. When the rest of the party returned to Winnipeg and Yaciw
and his wife found that they could not reach Gretna by train, the
couple got off at Rosenfeld. From this village, they went to Gretna
on foot, and here, because of an epidemic, they were advised to go
to Neche, in North Dakota. At Neche at the railroad station, where
there were no prospects of meeting people who could understand them,
Mrs. Yaciw broke down and burst into tears. A gentleman took pity on
her and donated several dollars. This act of charity cheered up the
couple and next day work was found. Yaciw was engaged in
construction work at two dollars a day, and Mrs. Yaciw worked in a
restaurant, washing dishes. In a month with their meagre savings,
the Yaciws returned to Winnipeg.
They felt more at home in Winnipeg, for here there were Jews and
Germans who could carry on a conversation in Ukrainian. They found
living quarters with the Czech family of Frank Skalendar. Yaciw got
a job doing construction work. On February 14, 1893, the Yaciw's
were blessed with a son. Frank Yaciw consequently holds the honour
of being the first native horn Canadian of Ukrainian descent. The
advent of a child necessitated the acquisition of a home. In the
spring, thirty dollars purchased a shanty at 479 King Street, which
then was on the outskirts of Winnipeg. To supply the infant with
milk, a cow was bought, and later another one. Gradually the Yaciw's
adjusted themselves to their new life.
In a few years, however, they began to yearn for a farm of their
own. In 1898, after six years residence in Winnipeg, Wasyl Yaciw
took a homestead near Ladywood, about 35 miles to the northeast of
the city. Here the old couple have lived until the present day,
happy in their adopted land. The family consists of four children,
three sons and a daughter. Their son Joseph completed Normal school
and has been teaching in Alberta. John holds the degree of Doctor of
Law from the University of Chicago, and is a practising lawyer, who
was made a King's Counsel in 1949 at Windsor, Ontario.
To the end of 1893, the known Ukrainian settlers in Canada came
from Nebiliv. Most of the score or more of families proceeded
straight to locality of their predecessors in the Beaver Lake
district of Alberta, which to-day is known as Star. Ivan Pilhpiw
with his wife and four children finally came to Winnipeg in the
summer of 1893. For six months he left his family in Winnipeg and
went to North Dakota to earn money for farm supplies. In December,
Pillipiw joined a group of Germans to go to Edmonton. In Winnipeg,
he purchased two oxen, a cow, a plough, a wagon, a bag of flour,
salt, sugar, and other food, and took his possessions with him in a
box-car for which freight he paid forty dollars. Pillipiw secured a
homestead at Bruderheim but in six months moved to the Beaver Lake
district to be among his kinsmen, where he made his permanent
habitation.
Now to turn to Wasyl Eleniak, who had remained at Gretna when
Pillipiw returned to his native village, from which he was to have
brought back Eleniak's family of three children. Eleniak's wife,
Anna, wrote to her husband that Pillipiw had been arrested. Eleniak,
who was illiterate at the time, subsequently had a letter written,
informing his wife that he would work in Canada for a while to make
enough money to pay for his passage to Nebiliv, and that he would
bring the family to Canada himself. Eleniak worked for Jacob Drueger
[9]
(possibly Krueger) for one year for one hundred dollars and for
another year for Heinrich Laiba (possibly Loewen) for one hundred
twenty dollars. In the late fall of 1893, Eleniak departed from
Gretna and arrived in Nebiliv at the end of December. He sold his
holdings, obtained a passport, and attempted to cross the Austrian
border with six other families. Four families, including Eleniak's,
were turned back for lack of sufficient funds. Eleniak had 400
rinskies, about $160.00. He worked for another month at logging, and
purchased passages from Shapiro in Hamburg. This time the border
officials permitted his family and two other families to cross into
Germany.
From Winnipeg, the Eleniak family proceeded to Gretna, arriving
there in the spring of 1894. Again he hired himself out to the
Mennonite farmers, this time as a cattle-herder at eighty dollars a
year plus 80 bushels of wheat and 40 bushels of rye. Here he was
joined by his brother, Ivan, and his family. After four years of
work at Gretna, Wasyl Eleniak used his savings to purchase two cows,
two oxen, a plough, and a wagon, with which in 1898 he went to the
Beaver Lake district in Alberta and took out a homestead close to
the other Nebilivites. At this place he has remained to the present
day. On January 3, 1947, when the Canadian Citizenship Act came into
force, this brave pioneer was singled out to represent the Ukrainian
ethnic group at the ceremonies. Along with Prime Minister W. L.
Mackenzie King and other notables, in a colourful ceremony at
Ottawa, Wasyl Eleniak was the recipient of the fourth certificate of
Canadian citizenship. [10]
It was the proudest moment of his life. His eight children, his
fifty-five grandchildren and great-grandchildren, as well as all of
the Ukrainian Canadians, shared in the pride.
Perhaps the first non-Nebilivite Ukrainian to come to Canada was
Andrew Banzur, [11]
from the county of Brody, the easternmost part of Galicia and across
the width of the province from Nebiliv. After serving in the
Austrian cavalry for three years, he married and worked his eight
and a half acre farm, which was considered better than the average.
In the slack seasons he did carpentering. He had no economic
difficulties, but could not tolerate the domination of the Poles
over the Ukrainians in Galicia. He, therefore, decided to emigrate
to Brazil. The village overseer refused to issue him a passport and
labelled him a malcontent, and a rebel. Banzur became irate, took
his military papers with him, and boarded a train for Vienna. His
military record stood him in good stead and he gained an audience
with Emperor Francis Joseph, who granted him permission to go to
Brazil and also refunded him the railroad fare for both ways. Banzur
immediately sold his property for 2,000 rinskies, or $800.00, and
purchased a passage for his wife and son to Brazil. For some reason,
the ship landed in New York and he was told that diseases were
rampant in that country of South America. He was advised to go to
the Canadian West.
Thus in a mysterious way, Banzur and his family arrived in Regina
on December 15, 1893. No work could be found and by spring his purse
was empty. He decided to go to Brandon in search of work. He must
have possessed a strong constitution, for he claims that he walked
the 240 miles in four days, averaging fifteen hours and sixty miles
daily along the railroad track. Banzur found work at Brandon,
digging sewers at $1.25 a day in the beginning. Later he took to
carpentry. The next Ukrainians to come to the town were Cyril Shkura
and Harry Kanalup, who arrived in 1897. In 1903 when there were
sixteen Ukrainian families in Brandon, Banzur was hired to build the
Greek Catholic church. The original Ukrainian settler in Brandon
built over fifty houses during his lifetime.
One of the first Ukrainian settlers who lived in Winnipeg
continuously and the longest time is Yakim Orlowsky, [12]
who like Banzur, hailed from the county of Brody in Western Ukraine.
After service in the Austrian cavalry, he married, but realized that
his small plot of land could not provide a living for a family. He
therefore sought to go to Canada. At Hamburg he learned that he was
short of money for passage to Canada, and instead went to Argentina
because the fare was cheaper. After working for one year in
Argentina, Orlowsky found he disliked the hot climate there and
returned to Europe, stopping over at London, England. Here, a
steamship agent urged him to settle in Canada and gave him a
proposition that if he found ten families which would go to the new
land, Orlowsky and his wife would receive free passage to Winnipeg.
To aid him in his task, he was given a quantity of pamphlets.
Orlowsky travelled back to his native village in Ukraine and
before long interested a group of Czechs, who had settled on poor
lands in the neighbouring village of Komarivka. Eleven Czech
families sold their lands and emigrated with the Ukrainian to
Manitoba, some settling in Winnipeg, others in Ladywood and
Cromwell, Manitoba, and some in Esterhazy, Saskatchewan; all of them
were grateful to Orlowsky for his encouragement and efforts.
Orlowsky, himself, took up residence in Winnipeg, where he has
remained since his arrival in 1894, from which date he has been in
the employ of the Canadian Pacific Railway. He was a founder of the
first Ukrainian Greek Catholic parish of St. Nicholas in Winnipeg in
1899, and ever since has been an active member of Sts. Vladimir and
Olga church, now a cathedral. He aided in the establishment of the
Mutual Benefit Association of St. Nicholas in 1905, the first of its
kind among Ukrainian Canadians.
By 1895, the Ukrainian leaders in Galicia became quite concerned
about the emigration and the ultimate fate of their people. All
sorts of conflicting reports and rumours about the emigrants were
circulating throughout the country. The Prosvita Society, an
educational association, with headquarters in the metropolis of
Lviv, known as Lwow in Polish and as Lemberg in German, decided to
make an investigation of the conditions and prospects in Brazil,
Canada and the United States, where most of the Ukrainians were
going. Dr. Osip Oleskiw, [13]
a graduate of the University of Lviv in chemistry and geology, who
also had studied botany and economics in Germany, was engaged to
make a written report on the emigration situation. In the early
summer of 1895, Dr. Oleskiw published a booklet, Pro Vilni Zemli
(About Free Lands), in which he condemned the slave labour methods
employed in Brazil and advised the people not to go to South
America, and suggested that instead they should emigrate to the
United States, and particularly to Canada, where the government
granted free lands to settlers.
To view the New World and to determine the possibilities of
Ukrainian settlement there, Dr. Oleskiw decided to make a tour of
the two countries. An account of his journey and his observations
appeared in his second booklet, entitled, 0 Emigratsiyi (On
Emigration), which was published upon his return to Lviv in
December. In it he described the nature of the soil on the prairies
and was satisfied that it was productive. He was particularly
impressed with the Red River soil, which he stated was "so rich,
that even without fertilizing it will produce good crops." A
description was given of the districts open for homesteads, the
registration of homesteads, the crop yields, use of machinery,
marketing and the price of wheat. Dr. Oleskiw was prepared to
recommend the free lands of Canada to the impoverished Ukrainian
farmers in the following terms:
"Everything points to the fact that in a few years our farmer
will build himself a good livelihood, although at present in the
hardships of pioneering, he does not resemble the image of
God-ragged and pitiful, his appearance does not harmonize with the
free lands where he has settled. It does not seem that fine
ploughed lands and pastures could belong to such poverty-stricken
people. If some of our intelligentsia were to take to heart the
fate of our people and go to Canada, they could serve as their
leaders, and prevent them from being swindled. I shall be happy to
show them on the map where our people have settled, and will tell
them many practical things which could help them." [14]
Dr. Oleskiw spent about six weeks travelling in Canada. He
arrived in Winnipeg in the latter part of July and here he made
contact with eight Ukrainians: [15]
Wasyl Yaciw, Yurko Panischak, Yurko Roshko, Yurko Paish, Dmytro
Wyzynowich, all from Nebiliv, and Luke Kulczycky, Ivan Barski, and
Hnat Dmytryshyn from other parts of Western Ukraine. He visited the
first Ukrainian settlement of the Nebilivites in the Beaver Lake
district. In September, the visitor had several conferences with
immigration officials at Ottawa. He advised the Canadian government
to open up an immigration bureau in Lviv, Galicia. Aware of the
extreme hostility of the Austrian government towards the emigration
of its subjects, the Canadian government knew that such a plan was
impractical, and in its place offered to establish a Ukrainian
immigration bureau in Winnipeg. Dr. Oleskiw agreed to this
alternative and promised to send a qualified person to take charge
of the bureau.
Dr. Oleskiw's booklet about Canadian settlement opportunities and
his announcement that a special bureau was established in Winnipeg
to help emigrants from Ukraine made him the object of denunciation
by the government officials and the great landowners in Galicia, but
made a positive impression on the petty farmers. Those, who had the
intention of improving their economic and social status, were now
assured that the information about Canada as presented by a scholar
and professor was reliable. The appointment of Cyril Genik [16]
as immigration agent at Winnipeg, upon the recommendation of Dr.
Oleskiw, proved to be popular. Genik, who came from Kolomeya, had
completed gymnasium (Junior College) at Lviv and passed a civil
service examination for the position of a postal official. Before
leaving for Canada, he corresponded with the Department of
Immigration at Ottawa, from which he received abundant German
language pamphlets with illustrations. These Genik distributed at
meetings in the villages of southern Galicia and Bukowina. Among the
small farmers, as well as the labourers in the cities resounded the
slogan, "To Canada."
After selling his land to his brother, Cyril Genik, leading a
group of a score of families, arrived in Winnipeg in the early fall
of 1896. This group was the spearhead of a mass immigration of
Ukrainians to Canada. As one observer expressed it, "Soon there
began to appear on the platforms and in the waitingrooms of the old
C.P.R. station, strange men and women wearing sheepskin coats with
the wool turned inside, either very large boots or often no boots at
all, the women with shawls or scarves on their heads, and hemp
skirts extending not quite to the ankle." [17]
Either directly or indirectly, most of the Ukrainians and the other
Slavs who arrived in the west secured some sort of advice about
lands or employment from the office of which Cyril Genik had
charge.
The year 1896 witnessed the establishment of the first rural
settlements in Manitoba. [18]
Perhaps the oldest is Stuartburn, which was followed by Gonor,
Brokenhead, and Dauphin. The first large wave of immigration came in
the following year, when approximately 4,000 Ukrainians passed
through the C.P.R. station in Winnipeg. In 1897 and 1898 the
following Ukrainian settlements came into existence: Sifton,
Ethelbert, Pine River, Gilbert Plains, Drifting River and Duck
Mountain in the extensive Dauphin region; Riding Mountain, Sandy
Lake, Rossburn, Strathclair and Shoal Lake in the region south of
Riding Mountain Reserve; Pleasant Home, Teulon, and Gimli in the
inter-lake region; Ladywood and East Selkirk in the Lower Red River
and Brokenhead area; and Gardenton, Vita, and Sandilands in the
Stuartburn area. By this time, the better lands had been taken up by
the older settlers and so the Ukrainians, inexperienced in judging
land and ignorant of the English language, took whatever the
government officials offered them. Thus large numbers of them,
particularly in the Stuartburn and inter-lake areas, obtained farms
with poor, inferior, stony, or swampy land. Their love of the soil,
their frugality, and their tenacity have in the majority of cases
brought these farmers a fair living and to many prosperity and
happiness. They were here to stay and make the best of their
conditions.
It would perhaps be most appropriate at the conclusion of this
paper, to note the beginnings of religious life among the pioneers.
[19]
It should be borne in mind that no priest came with the early
Ukrainian settlers. The leaders of the Ukrainians in the United
States, where the group had arrived earlier and had already
established many Greek Catholic parishes, a mutual aid society, and
a newspaper, Svoboda (Liberty), became concerned with the
religious plight of their kinsmen in Canada. It was decided to send
a Greek Catholic priest to visit the communities.
As result Father Nestor Dmytriw, who was also an editor of the
Svoboda, came to Winnipeg on April 5, 1897. The priest wrote
accounts of his travels to the Ukrainian weekly newspaper. [20]
Later these were published in a pamphlet entitled Kanadiyska Rus
(Canadian Ruthenia). At Winnipeg he was the guest of the immigration
agent, Cyril Genik. Father Dmytriw then went to the Dauphin area. At
Drifting River, he found fifteen Ukrainian families, all of whom
burst into tears when he commenced mass in a log-house. A crude
poplar cross was erected on a hill overlooking the river. It was
consecrated in commemoration of the emancipation of the serfs in
Austria in 1848 and dedicated to the liberty of the adopted country
of the settlers. The priest returned to Winnipeg and then proceeded
to Stuartburn, where he met forty-five families. Here an open-air
service was arranged for, but not held, for a violent thunder storm
raged the night before and snow fell on the Sunday morning. Father
Dmytriw left Stuartburn on April 17, being struck by the
poverty-stricken appearance and the loneliness of his people in a
strange land.
After a three-week visit in the Beaver Lake district near
Edmonton, the priest came to Winnipeg again, arriving on May 9. He
observed that on Sunday, Winnipeg was as "quiet as a tomb" and that
the 400 Ukrainians, having no church of their own, appeared lost and
wandered about "like gypsies without their tents." Writing to the
Svoboda, Father Dmytriw advised Ukrainians not to settle in Canada
without some capital to purchase the bare necessities of farming. He
stated that real opportunities existed, but that these were
accompanied by initial hardship. He gave a list of addresses for
prospective settlers, among which were Cyril Genik, Winnipeg; B.
Ksionzek, Trembowla; P. Maykowski, Stuartburn; and also Dr. Osip
Oleskiw, Lemberg, Galicia. In the fall, when he heard that Russian
Orthodox priests visited the Ukrainian communities in Alberta,
Father Dmytriw made another tour of the Ukrainian settlements in
Canada. In the United States, he frequently wrote about farming
opportunities in Western Canada and ran a steady advertisement in
the Svoboda, urging immigrants to write him about information,
railway tickets, etc. He has remained in the memories of the
pioneers as the first Greek Catholic priest to conduct services in
Canada.
In 1897 the pattern of Ukrainian settlement in Manitoba was
already becoming visible. The foundation was established and the
framework was taking shape. As it was still, the formative period,
the pattern of organized life and society within the structure was
yet to appear.
References
1 P. Yuzyk's radio talks, dated Sept. 5,7, 10,
1951, were published in several Ukrainian Canadian papers, and in
Kalendar Kanadiyskoho Farmera 1952 (Calendar-Almanac of the
Canadian Farmer, 1952), pp. 46-50; and in English translation in the
Ukrainian Weekly (Jersey City, N.J. U.S.A.), Oct. 29, Nov. 19, and
Nov 26, 1951.
2 An illustrated booklet outlining the
achievements and history was published for the occasion (in
Ukrainian) by the Ukrainian Canadian Committee under the title: L.
Biletsky, Ukrayinski Pionery v. Kanadi, 1891-1951 (Ukrainian
Pioneers in Canada, 1891-1951) (Winnipeg, 1951)
3 According to the 1951 census there were 98,753
Ukrainians in Manitoba out of a population of 776,541.
4 The best account of the early pioneer life
before 1914 is given by the first public school teacher of Ukrainian
origin in Manitoba, W.A. Chumer, "Spomyny pro perezhyvannya pershykh
Ukrayinskykh pereselentsiv v Kanadi" (Memoirs of the experiences of
the first Ukrainian settlers in Canada) (Edmonton, 1942). Useful
general works in the English language, dealing with settlement are
C.H. Young, The Ukrainian Canadians (Toronto, 1931) and Vera
Lysenko, Men in Sheepskin Coats (Toronto, 1947) (pro-communist
bias).
5 The most authentic account of Eleniak's pioneer
experiences is found in "Providnyk, Kalendar Kanadiyskykh
Ukrayintsiv", 1933 (Leader, Calendar for Ukrainian Canadians, 1933),
Winnipeg, pp.31-34.
6 Good Accounts of Pillipwi are found in Chumer,
op. cit., pp. 16-27; and Lysenko, op. cit., pp. 6-20.
7 Providnyk, 1931, p.29.
8 Yaciw's brief memoirs are found in
Providynk, 1931, pp. 29-30.
9 The spelling of German names is based on
transliteration from the Ukrainian as given in the memoirs.
10 See W.V. Eleniak, "Ottawa Honours Wasyl
Eleniak," in Opinion (Winnipeg), Jan-Feb. issue, 1947.
11 This account is based on Banzur's memoirs in
Providnyk, 1931, pp. 31-33.
12 Based on the article by W. Karpec, "Istoriya
Odnoho Pionira-Y Orlowskoho" (History of One Pioneer - Y Orlowsky)
in Kalendar Kanadiyskoho Farmera, 1951 (Calendar of the
Ukrainian Farmer, 1951), pp. 58-60.
13 The best available account of Dr. Oleskiw's
work and influence is found in Lysenko, op. cit., pp. 21-27.
Pertinent references are made in Chumer, op. cit., pp. 30-33; Young,
op. cit. pp.40-41; and in "Propamyatna Knyha Ukrayinskoho Narodnoho
Domu v Winnipeg" (Commemorative Book of The Ukrainian National Home
in Winnipeg) (Winnipeg, 1949) pp. 507-08.
14 Lysenko, op. cit. p.27.
15 Chumer, op. cit., p.30.
16 Information on Cyril Genik (now deceased) is
very scant, in spite of his many activities. He has perhaps been
ignored because of his socialist and atheistic views. Some
information on Genik is given by John Bodrug in his article on
Ukrainian settlements in the Dauphin area in Propamyatna
Knyha, pp. 508-09.
17 Quoted in Young, op. cit., p.40.
18 Chumer, op. cit., p.47.
19 The following sources give considerable
information on the very early religious life: Chumer, op. cit.,
pp.47-66; P. Yuzyk, A History of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic
(Uniate) Church in Canada (M.A. thesis, Saskatchewan); and
"Propamyatna Knyha Poselennya Ukrayinskoho Narodu v Kanadi"
(Commemorative Book of the Settlement of the Ukrainian People in
Canada) (Yorkton, 1941).
20 Svoboda (Jersey City, N.J., U.S.A.),
April 22 to June 3, 1897.