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Smert' ta pokhorony
CA BMUFA 0163-1983.015 · File · 1983
Part of Irene Hirniak ethnographic collection

The interviews are with the author's father about birth, wedding and funeral customs in the Ukraine. The paper, however, describes only the death and funeral customs in more detail with references to literature

Hirniak, Irene
Sing until you drop
CA BMUFA 0033-5 · File · 1991
Part of Brian Cherwick ethnographic collection

"Sing until you drop: The Ukrainian folk song tradition in western Canada" analyzes 19 lyrical-lifestyle folk songs and one kolomeika (dance song) sung at two informal singing sessions by two Canadian choir groups. Includes: essay and interview index

Shumka remembers

This dancework was created for The Ukrainian Shumka Dancers of Canada and received its premiere at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium on November 11, 2006. Shumka Remembers is multi-media dancework tribute to those who served and those who wished to serve in world conflicts. It was directed for the stage by Gordon Gordey, with Canadian modern dance choreographer Brian Webb and Shumka’s Resident Choreographer, Dave Ganert, and was danced by the Shumka company. The stage performance included guest appearances by Nicholas Faryna, an active service Afghanistan veteran and Bill Rawluk, a WWII veteran. The presence in the performance of these soldiers linked soldiers from WWI to those of more recent times and the present. The music for this dancework came from the repertoire of Winnipeg singer, Alexis Kochan and her musicians: Paris to Kyiv. Her haunting voice for There is a Gravemound in the Field (Oj U Poli Mohyla) was a cornerstone for the dramatic emotion in Shumka Remembers. The video of Shumka Remembers was shown in Kyiv on Remembrance Day 2008 under the patronage of Canada’s former ambassador to Ukraine, Abina Dann. Shumka Remembers is a tribute to the unjust internment of Ukrainian Canadians as “enemy aliens” in Canada during WWI. These “enemy aliens” were subjected to having to carry registration identity papers, often pay monthly registration fees, and were under constant surveillance. Of the 80,000 who were registered under the authority of the Act, 8,579 were deemed: “enemy aliens”. The majority of “enemy aliens” were Ukrainians and were arrested and interned in 26 makeshift encampments located mostly in Canada’s frontier hinterlands. They were forced into hard labour clearing land for roads, building bridges, and building the railway.

First Draft Concept/Libretto for Shumka Remembers, the original work that led to Voices of the Silenced, was created in 2003.
Shumka Remembers - Premiere Performance, Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, Edmonton: November 11, 2006.

Scrapbooks 3-28
CA BMUFA 0281-4-3-28 · File · 1953-1954
Part of Michael Luchkovich collection
  1. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings from the Ukrainian and local press on community and current affairs. Includes notes by Luchkovich. 1953-54
  2. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on local sports, especially on the Edmonton Eskimos. Includes correspondence linked to this topic. 1954
  3. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on community and current affairs. Includes handwritten notes and comments by Luchkovich. 1954-55
  4. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on Ukrainian and local current affairs. 1955
  5. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on community and current affairs. Includes notes and addresses. 1954-55
  6. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current events, especially Soviet. Includes notes and addresses. 1955-57
  7. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current affairs, especially on the Soviet Union. Includes notes. 1956
  8. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current issues, excepts one item dating to March 1931 on the subject of the 'Melting Pot'. Includes addresses and notes. 1957
  9. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on community and current affairs. Includes notes and addresses. 1957
  10. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current affairs. Includes many materials authored by or referring to Luchkovich, notes and addresses (business and private). 1959-60
  11. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on general Ukrainian and current affairs. Includes notes, addresses, and correspondence. 1960
  12. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on general Ukrainian and current affairs. Includes many materials authored by or referring to Luchkovich. comments and notes, and correspondence received. 1960
  13. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings chiefly on the Canadian Ukrainian community and the unveiling of the Taras Shevchenko monument in Winnipeg. Includes notes. 1961
  14. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current Ukrainian and Canadian Ukrainian affairs. Includes notes and addresses. 1961
  15. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on Ukrainian-related issues. Includes addresses and notes. 1961-62
  16. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on general current affairs. Includes greeting cards and notes. 1962
  17. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on current affairs and Canadian Ukrainians. Includes extensive notes, addresses and telephone numbers. 1962-63
  18. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on general current and local affairs. Includes notes and comments, and letters received by Ukrainian community figures in Edmonton from American academics. 1962-63
  19. Scrapbooks (2). Memoirs of Michael Luchkovich serialized in Ukrainian in Edmonton's "Ukrains'ki visti." Includes correspondence received from Ol'ha Woycenko in reference to these memoirs, and addresses, notes and comments. 1961-1963
  20. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on general current affairs and on local and Canadian Ukrainian issues. Includes notes. 1963
  21. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on multiculturalism. Includes notes. 1963
  22. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on local politics. Includes addresses, notes and corresondence. 1963
  23. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on multiculturalism in Canada and the Taras Shevchenko monument in Washington D.C. Includes correspondence, notes and addresses. 1963
  24. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on local and general current affairs. Includes correspondence, notes and articles by or about Luckovich.
  25. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on Shevchenko monument in Washington, multiculturalism and the Canadian Ukrainian community. Includes Christmas greetings, other correspondence and notes. 1963-1964
  26. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on multiculturalism and Soviet affairs. Includes notes. 1964
    n.n. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings, especially on Soviet affairs. Includes notes. 1960-1961 (stored in the oversized section, Archival Collections room.)
    n.n. Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings on community and current affairs. Includes notes and addresses. 1955-1956 (stored in the oversized section, Archival Collections room.)
CA BMUFA 0284-9 · File · 1964-1965
Part of UCAMA memorandums collection
  1. Brief Submitted to The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism by the Ukrainian Canadian Committee Edmonton Branch. Edmonton, Alberta, July, 1964.

  2. Brief Submitted the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism by the Ukrainian Canadian Veterans' Association. Winnipeg, Manitoba; Montreal, Quebec. 1964.

  3. Brief to the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism presented by the Ukrainian Canadian Committee Vancouver Branch. Vancouver, British Columbia, 1964.

  4. Report of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism: Book IV. The Cultural Contribution of the Other Ethnic Groups. Distribution : Department of the Secretary of State.

  5. Report on Bilingualism and Biculturalism. Volume IV : Section on Education.

  6. The letter from Ukrainian Canadian Veterans' Association to "Ukrainian News'' (Edmonton). March 20, 1965. Regarding the "Brief" to the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism by Ukrainian Canadian Veterans' Association. (Ukrainian language)

  7. Brief to The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism presented by the Ukrainian Canadian Committee, Winnipeg Branch, 1964

  8. Brief presented to The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism by the Ukrainian Canadian Committee, August, 1964

  9. Brief to The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism presented by the Ukrainian Catholic Brotherhood. Winnipeg, Manitoba