File contains one biography on Alexander Koshetz written by Taras Filenko and translated by Lada Hornjatkevyc.
File contains one biography on Andrij Hnatyschyn written by Taras Filenko and translated by Lada Hornjatkevyc.
A collections of textual work on kupalo and lemko weddings for the course Ukrainian 499 at the University of Alberta.
UntitledA wedding group photograph in front of the church wall painting (angels and 6 Archangels on the front). Wedding group is dressed in coats (early spring/late autumn)
Notebook with the list of content of library books of the Ukrainian Educational Association (Укр. Тов. Просьвіта ім. М. Павлика) in Vermillion, AB.
2 notebooks with the calculations of income and expenses of the Ukrainian Educational Association in Vermillion and the Sichinsky's Reading Room.
Handwritten script for Vertep performance.
A description of wedding customs and wedding songs from the Lemko region of Ukraine as told by Pavlo Kril' for the course Ukrainian 499.
A description of the midsummer customs of the holiday Kupalo with transcription of songs collected from various informants with musical scales for the course Ukrainian 499.
The hard cover book has 302 pages and is handwritten in Ukrainian. The cover has "Щоденник" written on it. The manuscript starts with the birth of the author in 1885 and goes on until 1963. The author tells his life story from 1885 when he was born in western Ukraine to 1905 when the family immigrated to Canada and settled in western Canada. He describes life in Calmar, Edmonton, and other places.
Embroidered pillow/cushion cover. Pattern is in cross stitch and features a a grouping of flowers in the middle and a 4 cm wide, multicoloured, geometric motif boarder around the edge. Emboidered on 16 count Aida cloth. The image is centered on the cloth and fills a majority of the area. Closure is on the side and was originally sewn shut. The back is made of 3 pieces of brown synthetic cloth sewn together.
Embroidered square pillow/cushion cover. Front side is completely embroidered in cross stitch. The back is blue synthetic fabric with machine embroidered white lines. Pattern is in cross stitch and features a large multi-coloured, geometric red and pink flower motif in the middle surrounded by large multicoloured floral motifs and a grouping of 3 diamonds in each corner. the edge is emroidered with alternating colour squares of pink, green and red plus 2 yellow squares in each corner. Closure is on the back and was originally sewn shut.
26 memorial cards with a variety of religious images including Jesus, individual Saints, and Bishops. Collected at various religious holidays and events at the church.
55 memorial cards with a variety of religious images including Jesus, individual Saints, and Bishops. Collected at various religious holidays and events at the church. This group was kept by Maria Drepko Stolarskyj in her Holy Communion Prayer Book.
The Writings from the War / Я пишу з війни collection consists of testimonials of Ukrainians about their experience of the Russian invasion of their country. The project’s archiving coordinator Alex Averbuch periodically deposits firsthand testimonials transmitted to the project team from various hiding places; from shelters, train stations, and refugee camps; from besieged cities. The project’s team also includes Valentyna Vzdulska (the initiator of the project), Daria Bairak and Maryna Solohub (SMM managers and co-coordinators), as well as numerous volunteers assisting in translating the testimonials and maintaining project platforms (website, social media).
The mission of Writings from the War is to collect, preserve, and disseminate these testimonials, both in the language of the original and English translation, so as to provide a documentary source for researchers, academics, students, journalists, artists, and the public in general. There are testimonials by soldiers, volunteers, doctors, drivers, teachers, animal rights activists, cooks, artists, and scientists – people of all professions; by adults and children, displaced persons, rescuers and the rescued – in short, anyone interested in sharing their experience with the world. This is a panoramic picture of the wartime “everyday,” reflecting private experiences during this catastrophe. All the testimonials have been provided to the project team by the witnesses themselves, and every story has a title, and a record of the person behind it.
The project has been carried out since March 2022 in collaboration with the University of Alberta’s Kule Folklore Centre.