UKRAINIAN CALGARY

Welcome to Ukrainian Calgary blog! I hope you will enjoy these explorations into ancestral heritage, connect with community far and wide, and find ways to embrace the Ukrainian experience in your everyday life!

Monday, 30 July 2012

Musical Director Position in Calgary

Korinnya Ukrainian Folk Ensemble is currently accepting applications for Musical Director.  Korinnya has been entertaining Calgary audiences since 1993.
Korinnya is a dynamic choral folk ensemble with a mission to cultivate, educate and promote Ukrainian folk music to the people of Calgary and beyond.  Dedicated in service to the choristers, the Musical Director director will confidently lead the choir with vision and creative energy to deliver the mission and mandate of Korinnya Ukrainian Folk Ensemble. 

Required qualifications for Musical Director include:
  • choral conducting experience
  • Ukrainian language proficiency, and
  • a love of Ukrainian folk music
Deadline for applications is August 15, 2012.  For more information, or to apply, please contact Marcia Maluta, Chairperson, Ukrainian Folk Ensemble Society at mmaluta@hotmail.com.

For more information or to join Korinnya, please visit www.korinnya.com.

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Labels: Canadian Ukrainian Music, Choral Conducting, Choral Music Calgary, Korinnya Ukrainian Folk Ensemble, Ukainian music, Ukrainian choir, Ukrainian folk music, Ukrainian Music

Lest We Forget - The Ukrainian Holodomor

What a wonderful Calgary summer weekend for a walk beside the Bow River! 

While trimming the hedge in my front yard this afternoon, my Italian neighbor Vic stopped to chat.  He's not used to walking, nor stopping to chat, but today he was just so excited to tell me about his day!  Leaving his car for repairs downtown, he spent the day marvelling at the beautiful restorations of our Calgary downtown.  His favorite view today was the tree lined road that has such an interesting story to tell!  Welcome to Memorial Drive!

We were amazed to find parking right on Memorial Drive, where there were lots of people cycling or walking east or west. City crews are busy completing the landscaping, and beyond the blooming yellow daylilies you can see the old caragana bushes, century old sentinels and new oak trees between yourself, the glacial fed waters of the Bow River and Calgary's Prince's Island.

Walking in Calgary's Sunnyside community, along Memorial Drive is actually steppng into a living testament honoring Canadian citizens who died for Queen and Country in World War 1. With the passage of time, the service duty of those original trees called for release and retirement - so in 2004 the "Landscape of Memory" Project began its important work revitalizing the nine kilometre road vista. 

Hearing Vic's enthusiasm, taking the time to walk the Calgary Memorial Drive, seeing fellow Calgarians, it also makes me so very proud of our common Canadian citizenship!  That Canadian communities work together to protect the weak, to stand on guard against tyranny, violence and inhumanity, and choose to make "beautiful"  happen, just makes my heart swell. Many Canadians have emigrated here bearing the scars and ancestral memory of horrible deeds done against their people, their culture, and language. Acting together as one free and principled nation, our citizens have the right to memorialize, and bear witness, lead by example and teach the world to do better.

An example of this teaching work is hidden at the east end of Memorial Drive near Edmonton Trail, where there is a small park hosting the Holodomor Monument. Memorializing the unprecidented peace time genocidal restriction of food by the Soviet Regime in Ukraine during 1932-33, this monument to the Holodomor (killing by starvation) actually serves as a point in contrast with Calgary's goodwill - the shelter for homeless people, just across the Edmonton Trail Bridge. Where Calgarians share their goodwill (food, clothing and shelter) the Holodomor memorial ceremonies in late November provide a glimpse into the horrific conditions underwhich millions of people starved in Ukraine - a famine inspired "meal" of thin broth and dry bread.

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) and the Memorial in Commemoration of Famines' Victims in Ukraine earlier in July 2012 signed a memorandum of understanding that will see organizational collaboration to promote human rights through education and example.  (KYIV, UKRAINE, Jul 04, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX)

"The Canadian Museum for Human Rights will strive to enhance understanding of human rights issues, not only in Canada, but internationally. Working with excellent institutions like the Memorial is one way for us to meet this noble mandate," said Stuart Murray. "By raising awareness of the Holodomor, the genocide-famine created by the Soviet Union in Ukraine in 1932-33, we hope to remind people the importance of breaking the silence on human rights issues. Denial and suppression only compound the violations that occur. This partnership will help bring the story of the Holodomor to a wider audience, to the benefit of generations to come."

Victor Didenko of the Memorial said, "During the famine of 1932-1933, Ukraine lost at least 4 million people. This number is shocking. The reasons of those events, the scale, and the consequences should be thoroughly investigated, studied, analyzed and reported to the world. The international community should realize that famine is the most terrible and powerful weapon of mass destruction. By means of hunger and the lack of food, tyrants conquered millions of people in the past; they suppressed their freedom and dignity and turned them into slaves. International cooperation with the CMHR will facilitate the comprehensive and objective study of famine as a phenomenon that will prevent such tragedies in the future." http://www.marketwatch.com/story/canadian-museum-for-human-rights-establishes-formal-partnership-with-the-memorial-in-commemoration-of-famines-victims-in-ukraine-2012-07-04

If you have the time, take a moment to hear the words of Gareth Jones, the Holodomor Exposer on BBC Documentary Tonight.  The words of an eyewitness who couldn't bear to hide the truth!

 http://www.ukrcdn.com/2012/07/05/gareth-jones-holodomor-exposer-on-bbc-documentary-tonight

I hope you take the time to walk Memorial Drive soon!  This impressive "Landscape of Memory" is also accessible from downtown via the new Peace Bridge (designed by Santiago Calatrava) across the Bow River which gives you a vista of the impressive Memorial Drive beautification project bordering Sunnyside Community. Calgary is indeed exploring new and traditional ideas about memorializing within the context of an urban setting.

 

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Labels: Bow River, Calatrava, Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Gareth Jones, Holodomor, Human Rights, Landscape of Memory, Memorial Drive, Peace Bridge, Sunnyside Community, Ukrainian Famine

Friday, 27 July 2012

Osvita Ukrainian Summer Immersion Program


Photo
Baba's Kitchen at Osvita 2012
recognize the Calgarian?
Calgary has a lovely Ridna Shkola program that includes history, culture and language, even Ukrainian 10, 20 and 30.  But at the time when my daughter was in Ridna Shkola, to finish her high school credits she needed to go to Edmonton for the Osvita Summer Immersion Program.  Without reservation, it was a good choice.  She met new friends, discovered a few things about living away from home, accomplished some academic learning and generally had a great time.  Many of the friends have become what she calls "forever friends".  It's like having Ukrainian friends puts them into a special category - beyond going for coffee, or seeing a movie together, it's a part of your extended family.

PhotoYou may not know about St. John's Institute in Edmonton but it is a great Canadian success story that should be shared!  Way back in 1918, St. John’s Institute was organized under the name M. Hrushewsky Ukrainian Institute (named after a great Ukrainian historian, writer, and statesman, Mykhailo Hrushwsky-1886-1934). An autonomous institution with its own character, St. John's Institute is affiliated with the Ukrainian Self-Reliance League of Canada known as S.U.S. Almost a hundred years later, it has lived up to community expectations and is a leading Orthodox Christian and Ukrainian-oriented residential centre fostering youth and their development.
St. John's Institute has continued the great SUS traditions and produces wonderful educational, spiritual, cultural, and outreach programs while operating a student residential centre for the Canadian and Ukrainian community.

One of the Institute's prize programs, Osvita,  had another successful program this summer 2012 in Edmonton.  From the pictures it is obvious the participants enjoyed learning in such a supportive environment.  The newly renovated St. John's Institute is simply top class, but the old Institute vibe is still there, warm hearted and embracing, a family away from home, your Ukrainian family away from home! 
Osvita 2012 participants from BC to Ontario improved their fluency in Ukrainian, cooking, dancing, singing, bandura lessons (with Andrij Hornjatkevyc) and more! Special events included fieldtrips to the Edmonton Holodomor Monument, the Vegreville Ukrainian Pysanka Festival, Alberta Branch of the Ukrainian Museum of Canada, Castle Mountain Internment Camp and Banff. Guest speakers included the former Premier Ed Stelmach, and Ukrainian radio announcer Roman Brytan.

Congratulations and thanks to everyone at Osvita - see you all next year at Osvita 2013!! 






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Labels: Alberta Ukrainian Festivals, Edmonton, Osvita, St. John's Institute, Ukrainian Folk Arts, Ukrainian language, Ukrainian Language School, Ukrainian Music

Thursday, 26 July 2012

Calgary's GlobalFest -August 26-26, 2012


Calgary is the host city for so many summer festivals, with many opportunities for celebrating our lovely city.  2012 also marks the 10th Anniversary of Calgary's GlobalFest.  This multicultural festival is simply world class!  With all the pavilions set up in Elliston Park representing a huge variety of cultures cooperating to make a better Calgary, the event is topped off with a fabulous international fireworks competition. Calgary's Ukrainian Tryzub Dancers will host the Ukrainian pavilion, and provide tasty Ukrainian food for the guests while delivering their unique brand of Ukrainian dance in their performances on various stages throughout the park.
Globalfest takes place from August 16-26 at Elliston Park, 17 Av and 68 St SE. 
The Tryzub Ukrainian Dance Ensemble will be featured during the Sunday August 26 finale performance. Dancing to live music performed by the Kensington Sinfonia and joined by several alumni dancers, this is guaranteed to be an exciting, explosive conclusion to GlobalFest 2012.

Come with your friends and family for a fun experience - get to know the culture side of Calgary!!

Support Tryzub by purchasing your Globalfest tickets through the web link provided below. Ticket prices are $10 per night, or five nights (not including the finale) for $40 (regular price $15/ticket). August 26 Finale tickets are $15 each. Please contact Tryzub at info@tryzub.ca to purchase your tickets now!

You can also see the Globalfest website for more details: www.globalfest.ca

  GlobalFest
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Labels: August 2012, Calgary Festivals, Calgary GlobalFest, Calgary Ukrainian Festival, GlobalFest, Tryzub Ukrainian Dancers, Ukrainian Calgary, Ukrainian Dance, Ukrainian Folk Arts, Ukrainian Food

Tuesday, 24 July 2012

More Ukrainian Summer Camps!




For an excellent experience with an excellent artist-educator, you just can't beat summer camp with Larisa!  She is a wonderful Canadian artist of Ukrainian ancestry whose career has blossomed - and I am not even exaggerating.  She loves flowers, and with her extensive knowledge of ancestral Ukrainian culture, folklore and folk remedies, she is able to convey multiple layers of meaning in her wonderful watercolor paintings.  Drama, subtle and sensitive images of moments in culture, moments in history, a social commentary that has brought her artistry acclaim and international recognition. Her beautiful art works hold a special place in private and corporate collections throughout North and South America, Australia, and Europe.

Exploring Ukrainian folklore through dance, drama, art and cooking, she has a unique message for all young people - don't you wish she would teach adults too? She is partnering with St. John's Institute in Edmonton to present summer day camps for children ages 6-12 this August.  Maybe it's time to visit family or friends in Edmonton for the week and register the kids for Art by Larisa's Ukrainian Summer Camp! 
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Labels: Art by Larisa, Canadian Artist, Larisa Sembaliuk Cheladyn, Ukrainian Canadian Artist, Ukrainian Dancing, Ukrainian Folk Arts, Ukrainian Summer Camp

Gardening in Ukrainian Calgary


photo.JPG
impressive horseradish - but not mine!
These sunny, hot Calgary days are forcing me to spend more time outside, which is wonderful, but it makes it impossible to overlook the overgrowth.  Time to look at improving our landscaping plan. The yard is great, but all the plantings from over the years are overgrown, or have lived their life cycle and need to go to the great compost heap in the sky (actually backyard). The spruce trees had a disease and stopped flourishing.  The mayday (I thought it was a chokecherry) lived a good life, it got cut down, as did the second one. Now the ornamental crab, though it had the most spectacular mauvy pink blossoms, and was the most beautiful tree in the neighborhood for a while, has aged and looks scruffy at best. The nicest large plantings on our yard are one huge Manitoba maple that gives shade to the front of the house, and its little sibling which will shade the front corner. So with a landscaping rethink, I decided to consider which traditional Ukrainian horticultural elements we would want to feature.
As I recall, every Ukrainian folk song or folk tale uses symbols from nature to underscore relationships. The way the boughs on a tree bend and bow, the order of flowers growing, the sunflower gracefully tipping its face upwards, the water rushing over the roots of a tree, everything has meaning. Silly, I know, but I have always wondered at the garden choices of my Baba, my Pra-Baba, and even my mama.

Pra-baba's garden was amazing, it even had a cold frame which she used to nurture little seedlings through tempermental springs on the prairies.  Beets, potatoes, cabbage, beans, peas - these I remember.  Sunflowers too!

I know that my grandmother insisted there should be schavel', wild sorrel on the yard. So she brought plants here to my home in Calgary from her cute little house, and amazingly huge garden in Manitoba. And raspberries, because she knew they are my absolute favorite fruit. And my uncle gave us horseradish to plant somewhere, and though it seemed right, the Baba-team warned it should only go into the alley-which it did, and promptly died. I have never heard of khrin dying, but in this Calgary back alley it did.
photo.JPG
Now you know where there has been a good "hospodenia" gardener, when you see horseradish in the backyard that looks as impressive as this!!

Mama gave me mint and told me to plant it where it wouldn' t go completely berserk and take over the property. It gets used all summer long in cooking recipes like chortopita (the wild-greens version of spanakopita that my family loves). I also dry the leaves several times a season, when it gets overgrown, for sipping on mint tea all winter long. Just loved it when my mama would send up bags of the dried green stuff, my kids would just laugh when mama was getting her new "stash"!
photo.JPG
chamomile

Then somehow some little chamomile plants hitch hiked here in a pot of other things.  It sows itself, and when there is enough I collect and dry the flowers for chamomile tea, really!!

My husband planted hollyhocks because he remembered seeing them grow in Baba's yard. Mal'vi, as they are called in Ukrainian, are puffy like mallows, and a pretty pink, but with the windy weather in Calgary they tend to fall over. The gladioli did too! So I have delphinium. But what are they called in Ukrainian?

photo.JPG
periwinkle - barvinok
Then there is the poppy!  With all the famous recipes calling on ground poppy seed, kutia, poppyseed chiffon cake and poppyseed tortes - but Canadian law says it is illegal.  darn!  So I have to restrain myself to the other traditional flowers used in a Ukrainian garden all seem to be popular plantings here on the prairies!   Marigold, peony, bluebells (campanula carpatica!), chamomile, periwinkle (barvinok), and iris, which, wouldn't you just know it, most of which grow in the garden already!!  Maybe I am on track already??


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Labels: Calgary Gardening, Calgary Orchard, Ukrainian Gardening

Debut Album for Zhyto - Calgary's Ukrainian Zabava Band

Another reason to celebrate Zhyto!

via Jordan Welborne on Facebook
The traditional melodies and rhythms of a people's music contain deeply embedded reflections of the language and culture of its origin.  Kodaly said it, Kolessa said it, Bartok and probably a whole lot of other music people too.  That is why Ukrainian music is so dear to Ukrainian Calgary. And when young people love it, and sing the lyrics to tell the stories, there are a million reasons why that is good!
wisegeek.com

"Zhyto" is a Ukrainian Zabava band based in Calgary, Alberta. Actually the root word probably says "life" too. To live, to enjoy, to prosper, to pass it forward!!  The group brings together flavors of rock, dance, pop and classical into Ukrainian folk music to create a sound entirely their own. Delighting audiences across Canada, the band has an uncanny way of understanding their audience needs, and delivering high energy performances that make guests very happy.  Excellent communicators, with great stage chemistry, Zhyto is a young band with an already impressive list of satisfied festivals and zabava audiences.  http://www.reverbnation.com/zhyto

Zhyto is proud to be releasing their debut album on Friday, August 3rd at the 2012 Canada’s National Ukrainian Festival at Selo Ukraina in Dauphin Manitoba.  www.cnuf.com 
If you haven't been at the festival yet, perhaps this is the year!!

If you are in Calgary or Edmonton, you could catch a ride on the OHUCS Dauphin Bus Tour and party the entire trip there and back! 
Photo: It's baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack! Join our bus tour from Alberta to Canada's National Ukrainian Festival in Dauphin, MB.

Later in August, Zhyto will also perform at Ukrainian Day at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of Edmonton.  See you there!!

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Labels: Canadian Ethnic Media, Canadian National Ukrainian Festival, Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, Ukrainian Festivals, Ukrainian Music, Zhyto Band Calgary

Friday, 20 July 2012

Calgary's "Zhyto" at Toronto Ukrainian Festival (September 14-16,2012)

They say it takes a village to raise a child.  Well, Ukrainian Calgary has contributed in some small way to the successful rise in  musicianship for some of our young community members.  Support, enthusiasm, appreciative audience!  But we all know it it the dedication of family and the home that helps children get a footing in life.  Still, this Calgary Ukrainian village has for years enjoyed watching Cathy and Bill's kids grow up and become the generous people they are!  Amazing musicians with big hearts, and enthusiasm to share!   Raised in a Ukrainian Calgary home, the violinist and her brother have gathered friendships and together formed a great band that now gains accolades across the country!  The last time I saw them was in Edmonton and the kids kept the dance hall hopping until all hours - but a friend in Chicago heard them and loves them too!  I suspect their list of performances has grown considerably in the past few years - time to check out their website!  http://www.reverbnation.com/zhyto  You can also find them on Facebook. 
 
Formed in the fall of 2008, Zhyto brings together musicians and sounds of every style, including jazz, rock and classical to create a unique sound in the Western Canadian polka scene. With such versatility, Zhyto is as comfortable playing the polka favorites everyone knows and loves, as well as english hits, both new and old.

Toronto's Ukrainian Festival really knows how to pick their bands!  Calgary's own "Zhyto" is playing for the September annual Ukrainian festival on Bloor West Village - great east west community building!

If you haven't planned for January of 2013 - maybe you should!

This is the same band that will play at PLAST Calgary's Malanka in January of 2013.  See you there!!
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Labels: Bloor West Village, Toronto Ukrainian Festival, Ukrainian Festivals, Ukrainian Folk Arts, Ukrainian Music, Western Canada Polka Scene, Zhyto Band Calgary

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

The Circle of Time

Just who is God?  Billions of people throughout time believe God is the Universal Creator, the One from whom we came, and to whom we will eventually return. So God is home.  Living in our physical body therefore is a time of intense separation, often sporadically in communion with the One, but more commonly in yearning for union, or reunion.  Being born, nurtured, living human lives, we all have moments when we search for meaning, for purpose.  But maybe, just maybe, this yearning is purposeful? Perhaps our life journey is designed precisely in order to enhance the yearning for home?

Imagining is really important!  It's a way we open the door to discovery.  Poets find unique, creative ways to share their perceptions.  Scientists watch the world, and their analysis helps explain how things work and how new things could work.  Even historians piece together memories of events and try to make sense of it all.  So what does it all mean?  Why are we here? 

 the circle of time, the wreath of evergreen, the vinok
Even in the deep recesses of time, the hands of our forefathers pointed to the earth and sky, tenderly caressing the shapes and figures of the animate and inanimate, trying to understand the relationships that bound, and which do not invite. Their awareness, the considerable energy they spent trying to survive, meant checking on the sun, moon, stars, water, earth, and planets.  Observing all the clues they could gather in the natural world they used scientific processes! 

They passed their revealed truths on their children, their tribe, their people. They explained themselves through their art, their language, songs, architecture, myths, and folklore. They poured their life-experiences into artifacts which expressed the hopes and dreams they had for their children, with the fervent plea that this codex of knowledge would ensure their progeny's survival. It was all about survival. Or was it in anticipation of something greater?

While immediate survival was crucial, essential to this journey was that one was headed somewhere, and that somewhere was better than here, and understanding would come "over there". And their future children would benefit from a code of thought, a method of expression, valuable intellectual inheritance symbolically encoded in its physical artifacts, myths and language. How does one understand this inheritance? How can one use this intensely hopeful message from the past?

When you look at the art, weaving, pysanky, embroidery, pottery, carvings, and tools that come from the Ukrainian heritage, even if they are stylized and seem contrived, they are actually remnants of that amazing past.  These are the collected hopes, dreams and yearnings of people, who much like us, wanted the best for their children, for their progeny, the future.  That's why if you read the symbols and signs, there is actually a lot of faith bound up in the code that is our culture.  Information that some person, a long time ago, felt was essential for survival, has been passed from hand to hand, being replicated in each successive copy of some artifact in history.

It dawned on me recently, all these messages are yearning to be understood, begging for a receptive mind to see the person behind the art form.  And the ultimate goal is to heal that sense of intense separation from the One.  That has to be the most amazing thought.  These hands were all speaking to the future about faith, hope and yearning for God!

The next time you see or participate in any aspect of Ukrainian folk culture, consider the "artist".  What did the "artist" intend?  Then, with humility, consider that the art has survived thousands of replications and is still beautiful, still holds meaning, still yearns for the One!!  Vichnaya Pamyat' Eternal Memory! of them, for us, for our future. 




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Labels: Culture, Eternal Memory, God and Culture, Ukrainian Arts, Ukrainian Culture, Ukrainian Folk Faith

Monday, 16 July 2012

Vinkopletenia in Calgary 2012

Weddings are wonderful, and Ukrainian weddings are even more special, especially in Calgary.  The colors, traditions, the layer upon layer of symbolism in all the events around the wedding just boggle the mind.  It was just so at last night's Vinkopletenia for a beautiful Ukrainian Calgary bride-to-be.  A Ukrainian vinok, the wreath for a wedding is very special.  Though in a religious ceremony of the  Byzantine rite, they will be crowned in glory with golden crowns in church, the traditional vinok for a wedding is evergreen (not like a tree!) from the periwinkle plant called barvinok. 

Barvinok is a low ground covering vine that is very delicate.  The shiny little leaves stay green even in winter, hence the ever-green category.  The fine springs of barvinok are woven together intricately.  Nature crowns the couple, granting them a love that is "ever-green" and ever new.  Makes me think of Barbra Streisand but....

How lucky this young bride had her baba there to bless the ceremony - to pass the traditions of pra-baba's home onto another generation of lovers.  Isn't that the best gift? Time!  Time to learn, time to appreciate, time to share and time to plan the future. Friends and family joined in to wish the "moloda" every blessing upon her new journey.  Life is a circle, everything dependent upon what came before!  And the fruits of time also enter into the circle of life.  Wow! 
The songs of the vinkopletenia ceremony were chosen specifically for this event - Ukrainian folk songs telling of love, stories of nature, the seasons of love, water, moon, stars, roses, kozaks and maidens.  A tradition as old as time, and new as young love. 

Before the event was over the guests all participated in a wish giving standing before the "hiltse" or tree of life, just like the fairy godmothers in Sleeping Beauty.  Thanks to all the lovely musicians who sang with their hearts, revealed the nuances in lyrics and shared the stories of their loves.  May the "molodiata" keep the traditions of their ancestral homes for generations to come.  Mnohaya lita!!
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Labels: barvinok, periwinkle, Ukrainan vinkopletenia, Ukrainian Music, Ukrainian wedding

When is MALANKA 2013? Not too early to book the date!!

The Calgary Plast Ukrainian Scouting Association (PLAST) is again planning for their annual MALANKA!  A really special event, the PLAST MALANKA brings a Calgary Western Flare to the Ukrainian New Year celebration called Malanka.  Plast has a lot of experience with this event, it has been on the calendar each year for.....well at least over 10 years - and each year we dance til the band begs to go home!!


uocvancouver.com
A Ukrainian Malanka is a formerly rural celebration of the New Year. In the deep winter in Ukraine, people would perform traditional plays and skits marking the mystical turn of time.  Calgary PLAST Ukrainan Scouts is also a mix of old and new traditions - each year their program of activities seems to broaden its vision of what is means to be Ukrainian and Canadian.  Calgary PLAST's MALANKA is really a very impressive black tie event in modern downtown Calgary!  It's a special, dress up affair!

Calgary PLAST is again hosting two bands for their 2013 Ukrainian New Years Malanka. Performing that evening will be the two Dance Bands from Calgary, "Zhyto" and "The Real Deal". Also performing will be Stephania Romaniuk, Tanya Chumak, and TRYZUB Dance Ensemble.  Non stop dancing is guaranteed - with a mix of blues, R&B, funk, soul, swing and beyond, and then enthusiatic toetapping traditional Ukrainian dance band sounds, how can you beat it?

I always have such a fun time at Malanka - it's a good party, good company and such a lot of fun seeing friends after the family clutch of the Christmas holidays.  Time to kick up a kolomeyka or something. 

PLAST’s Malanka 2013 will be held on Saturday, January 19, at The Calgary Petroleum Club.

Here's a sample of Zhyto playing - Komaryk - The Mosquito!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_v2LKVCbTvM

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Labels: Calgary Festivals, Malanka, PLAST, Plast Ukrainian Scouts, The Real Deal Band Calgary, Ukrainian Malanka, Ukrainian Music, Zhyto Band Calgary

Roman Brytan - Alberta's Ukrainian Radio Personality in Calgary


Mr. Roman Brytan - awarded the prestigious Sierhey Khmara Ziniak Award by the Canadian Ethnic Media Association December 2011.  Mr. Brytan is a well known radio personality in the Ukrainian Canadian community, well-known radio personality, and chair of the UCC’s 120th Anniversary of Ukrainian Settlement Committee.
December 2011
http://canadianethnicmedia.com/
The Ukrainian Canadian Professional and Business Association of Calgary is planning for a very entertaining and informative September dinner meeting.  Roman Brytan, Alberta's long time famous Ukrainian radio personality and community activitist will be speaking here in Calgary.  Community affairs, political news, and our relationship with media in Canada and Ukraine - I am sure you will enjoy his wide range of expertise!  Hope you can make the evening meeting!!

The Dinner meeting is planned for September 27, 2012 evening at the Danish Canadian Club at 727 11 Avenue SW.  Make sure you call to the office to book your dinner tickets - bring a friend and contribute to building our Ukrainian Calgary community life!!

Tel: +1(403) 670-5477
E-Mail: execdirector@ucpbacalgary.caThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it


UCPBA  P.O. Box 6474, Station "D"
Calgary, Alberta  T2P 2E1 CANADA
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Labels: Alberta Radio, Canadian Ethnic Media, Canadian Ukrainian Music, Roman Brytan, UCPBA, Ukrainian Alberta, Ukrainian Canadian, Ukrainian Canadian Congress

Saturday, 14 July 2012

Little Birdie

http://humortrain.com/

We were recently at a resort for a holiday break. The location, the breathtaking views, the perfect combination of sand, water, gentle breeze, the sounds of peaceful rest, I have such appreciation for the Creator!

At the same time, the harmonious combination of services provided at this resort meets every perceived whim or need. Shelter for the frail body that can be harmed through excessive weather, food to shape the body and prime it for service, companionship to feed the social needs, and genial entertainment that soothes the spirit and engages the imagination.

So here at the resort, my main work is to suntan. Between suntanning episodes there are swimming breaks, eating breaks, sleeping breaks, and not doing much but relaxing breaks. It is a hard life, but somehow I got voluntold for this job.

We head to the open air restaurant for mealtime and we notice the place could easily be overcome with wildlife if it didn't have netting on the windows and doors. Low tech solutions include a door monitor person who holds the netting for entries and exits. However, sometimes a keen little bird slips in, hopping sideways between the netting, eager for the feast of corn nibblets or bread crumbs. Interesting choices, but that is what they take. So we watch them in silence.

This makes one think the little prayer "Be still,and know I am God!". I silently thank the Creator for the millions of adventurous creatures of the depths who fulfilled their lives and their legacy is the perfectly soft sand that we walk upon. Whether the wind is more powerful, or the sun, one can't help but notice how every part of creation zealously uplifts its face in the breeze adoring the sun. Every tree, flowering plant, and crawling reptile pursues its mission of purpose, of gratitude, and of service.

It is so in Ukrainian Calgary, too. So many blessings: our amazing location nestled in the pocket of creation rich in resources, the best prairie and mountain vistas, sunshine and chinook reprieves from winter, few mosquitos, the perfect combination of healthy water, clean air, as well as the pleasant tug of economic opportunity.

Is it any wonder this harmonious living has blessed us with such a vibrant Ukrainian community in Calgary as well? Really, so far away from "the mother ship"' Ukraine, we have so many tremendous human services that meet just about every perceived human need or whim. Everything from Ukrainian child services, to Ukrainian language schools, youth activities, opportunities to learn, teach, serve, sing, play, share, revel and worship exists in our Ukrainian Calgary. And the amazing thing new immigrants to Calgary are astounded to realize -  primarily volunteer work!! It's like Ukrainian Calgary attended "self-help" classes for 120 years!! Perhaps in light of all this we could revisit the "self-help" theme. What is it all about?  What for? 
To paraphrase Richard N. Bolles, the writer who has sold over 8 million copies of the series "What Color is Your Parachute?", purpose is threefold.  First, to seek to stand in the presence of the Creator, to know Him as God, and to enjoy Him and see His hand in all things. Second, to do what you can, moment by moment, to make this world a better place, having embraced His wisdom. Third, to employ the unique talents and abilities that He has gifted to you, which you use with immense joy and fulfillment, in the places and services for which He has created the perfect need of you.

Is yours a mission of mind? Are you an optimistic pioneer who sees possibilities where others see problems?  Could your gift of vision and leadership help Ukrainian Calgary?  Perhaps the spirit will move you? 
Is yours a mission of gratitude? Do Ukrainian Canadian arts, symbols, literature, music, dance and history hold a special place in your spirit - and can you convey that to others?   Maybe you are a resource, a helper, a Ukrainian school teacher and nurture a love of Ukrainian ancestry in our children?
Is yours a gift of service? Are you blessed with abundance, and want to "pay it forward"?

Sitting in the resort restaurant, I watched my husband look over my head, raise his eyes, and smile broadly. He had spied a little bird flying to and from the netted window. Watching him smile so sweetly, I couldn't help but ask what was going on behind me. Turning, I watched the little bird pick up little food crumbs and fly to the screen, where the little bird's life partner was singing beautifully in anticipation of the shared crumbs coming to him. Their little beaks opened, their voices chirped happily, they shared the bounty left by the guests.

An astoundingly beautiful metaphor. Don't we all wait for the crumbs to fall upon us fom the Creator's bountiful table? I hope you will share some of your crumbs: time, talent, and treasure. Bud'mo!



Posted by Unknown at 21:14 No comments:
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Labels: Jobs, Richard N. Bolles, Ukrainian Community, Ukrainian Dance, Ukrainian Folk Arts, Ukrainian Organizations, Ukrainian School, Volunteer

Thursday, 12 July 2012

Ukrainian Orchard Plans for Calgary?

photo.JPG
actinidia kolomicta growing in my front yard
So when my husband and I were in Ukraine a while back and visited the family dacha outside of Kiev, we admired their cherries, apricots, plums, oh, so many beautiful fruits! Then sitting under the shady grape vine covered car port for lunch and catching up with family, we also couldn't help but notice the half white and half green leaves of a special vine crawling up the side of the two story cottage. My husband's attention was grabbed by the pretty vines which, family explained, were actually kiwi. The pretty vines, vigorous climbers, are called actinidia kolomikta. Here in Calgary he found them at the garden center.  Turns out they are creating quite a sensation in gardening circles, as the hybrid is actually referred to as arctic kiwi for their relative hardiness. They have glossy dark green leaves, which go yellow in the fall.  They have little white flowers in springtime and delicate, thin skinned fruits that are delicious.   Planting them in a sunny location up front seemed logical, but when they struggled, we bought more, and noticed from the tag that they love sun and part shade. So we have some more in the back garden, nestled against the shady wall, and they are growing quite reasonably. The year before last we even had a few handfuls of the fruit. The hail that fell last summer (was it four or five times!) really prevented any little fruits from growing, much less ripening on the vine. But when they do get protected from the ravages of Calgary hail and frost, the fruit is small, like a long green grape in size.  The fruit is delicate, soft skinned, and the sweet taste is exactly like ripened kiwis you buy in the stores, imported from some tropical land far away!

Did you know that way back in the first immigration from Ukraine there were people who had come with full intentions of having fruit orchards here? Well I know this because when I went to Peter Svarych School in Vegreville a long time back, I discovered he was among the most interesting company when he immigrated. Ambitious just isn't the word.  Came here in 1900 to help family, then as a labourer, then opened a lumberyard and building materials shop.  Was a game warden.  Eventually became a school trustee with a school named after him.  What was his background?

It just so happens that the people in western Ukraine have a great climate for apple trees, cherry trees, you name it! And, transplanting their lives here, over a century ago those eager homesteaders brought the idea of orchard farms to life in the Vegreville area (maybe it was Royal Park?). Everything from raspberries, to chokecherries, gooseberries, apples, pears, plums, nanking cherries, strawberries, saskatoon berries have become part of our prairies orchard vernacular.  With a shelter of fast going pine, spruce, and poplar, they ambitiously planted fruit trees which actually bore fruit in the short term. The remnants of that era are at the experimental farms out there (are they still there?)  Imagine taking virgin prairie land, and nurturing lush, market garden orchards way back then?

When my grandparents were still on the farm, my Dido, dad and uncles planted an orchard on the family farm north of Edmonton. Harvesting apples, cherries, plums and (I think) gooseberries, combined with the fact my Dido had an apiary (he kept bees) (it always makes me smile to say that, because you can't own bees!) my family tried to emulate this centuries-old Ukrainian orchard tradition. For many years the cartoon image of Mama and Tato sitting in rocking chairs, shooting nuisance prairie gophers with slingshots would cause spontaneous laughter! It never did happen, although the gophers probably would have backed off a bit had the folks at least tried, but then time flies!

Here in Calgary some years ago I visited with Mrs. Meketiak, then a centenarian who shared some of her heritage garden flowers from her home near SAIT- I think they were snow drops.  And Mrs. Swityk, who also lived not far away also gave me garden clippings - she had a huge lemon tree growing in her front porch!!  I always recall driving past and seeing their gardens just bursting with joyful color and abandon.  How did they get so good at it?  Well, we haven't been here long enough for those kind of bragging rights. 

Here at our home in Calgary, in the shadow of Nose Hill, we have a lovely apple tree which will probably bear 2,000 apples this year. It will be apple pie season again! Apple raspberry, apple rhubarb, apple-kiwi? Maybe not this year, but there is always hope.
I wonder whether kalyna - the high bush cranberry would grow somewhere on my yard??



Posted by Unknown at 09:38 No comments:
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Labels: Arctic Kiwi, Calgary Gardening, Calgary Orchard, Ukrainian Calgary, Ukrainian Food

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Alberta Summer Ukrainian Dance Programs 2012


Chelsie Dowler/Rocky View Weekly
Chelsie Dowler/Rocky View Weeklly
Ukrainian dance sisters, Kassidy and Kierra Bayda pose in costumes they wore at the Southern Alberta Ukrainian Dance Festival, March 17, at Bert Church Theatre. http://www.airdriecityview.com/article/20120314/ACV0302/303149955/0/acv
Both my daughters participated in Ukrainian dancing, but it seems I missed the Southern Alberta Ukainian Dance Festival this year!  In the past I recall great performances, super adjudicators, family and friends all there to pass on a love of Ukrainian dance, a love of Ukrainian culture, the community of Ukrainian friends!  Even now one of my daughters' friends is a girl she danced with a while back. 
The story goes this way.  My daughter and her friend were the silly girls in Ukrainian dancing, couldn't stop talking.  Had fun!  Enjoyed the learning, but really enjoyed the company.  So they danced into their teens, but couldn't remember when they met.  My daughter was looking at photos from when she was very little.  Turns out this friend was a little girl from my daughter's first Ukrainian dancing lessons, when she was a preschooler!  Turns out that the friendships you make through Ukrainian dancing are frequently the ones that follow you through life. 
If you haven't yet filled your August with Ukrainian Camp ideas, here is another one that is sure to please your young Ukrainian Dancer!!  ALTANETS'!  For summer dance workshops featuring exceptionally qualified dance teachers from Ukraine, this is Alberta's tops!  Teachers are members of this Canadian Ukrainian Dance Academy (http://www.cudacademy.com/) with a proven dance curriculum, and leveled programs for growth in dancing ability!   Alberta Ukrainian Dance Association (http://www.abuda.ca/) again presents its annual Ukrainian Summer Dance Program.  Workshops to improve technique, learn about the dance styles of various regions and styles, and learn about the Art Form that is Ukrainian Dance in Canada!!

Meeting other Ukrainian dancers from across Alberta and the provinces of Canada, enjoying Ukrainian dancing together - what fun!  The cultural program includes crafts, songs, and fun activities to help dancers capture the Ukrainian spirit in a Canadian setting! 
WORKSHOP #2: OVERNIGHT CAMP
CAMP OSELIA, LAKE WABAMUN, AB
AUGUST 5-10, 2012
INSTRUCTOR: VOLODYA MAKAROV
PRICE: $395

Posted by Unknown at 13:48 No comments:
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Labels: Alberta Ukrainian, Alberta Ukrainian Festivals, Calgary Ukrainian, Ukrainian Culture, Ukrainian Dancing, Ukrainian Festivals, Ukrainian Summer Camp

Another way to use Schavel (Wild Sorrel)

In an earlier blog article I mentioned chortopita, and some people looked at me askance.  Just what is that?  Well it is a Greek variant on spanakopita.  If you have ever enjoyed spanakopita, it is really easy to make and enjoy with your home grown greens.  Another way to use up fresh wild sorrel.   

Wild Mountain Greens Pie (chortopita) 

1 portion (1 large slice)  calories:300
Cooking time:50-60 minutes
for a medium-sized baking tin

1.5 kilos of assorted wild greens (I use swiss chard, mint, wild sorrel, but you may use romaine, leeks, a few young beet leaves, even grated zucchini that has been sqeezed dry)
200 grams of spring onions (garlic chives in my case)
1.5 cups of olive oil
1 cup feta cheese
dill and parsley, both finely chopped
1 T of sugar (spring greens are usually sweet enough, but if you use kale or such, try it)
filo pastry

Clean and wash the greens well and cut up as finely as possible.  Salt and rub the mass vigorously between the fingers.  Then squeeze to remove as much water as possible.  Add the sugar, oil, dill and parsley and cheese ( if you are using it).  Using a pastry brush, coat the sides and bottom of a baking tin.  Place one filo sheet on the bottom and using a pastry brush, apply a little oil to the entire filo sheet.  Using the same method, add more filo sheets, brushing the individual filo sheets gently with oil. Usually 6-7 layers of filo for the bottom, saving the rest for the top, or alternately you could use 4 filo, for a bottom, middle and top layer.  (Leave some filo over the edges so you can seal the package later.) Spread the greens evenly in the pastry, and layer the gently brushed filo pastry over the mixture.  Seal the edges and trim off the excess filo.  Bake the pie in a moderate oven for about 50-60 minutes.  Serve warm or cold.  Delicious!
Posted by Unknown at 12:01 No comments:
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Labels: Chortopita, Schavel', Wild Sorrel

Hope Springs Eternal




My embroidery
Our daughter just moved away from the comforts of our home in Calgary, and into a new life far away from the embrace of the familiar - her community, friends and family. As parents, we know the human journey involves change, and her place isn't really that far from home. But if you look at it as another emigration from the "homeland" it takes on a hugely different significance.

The ancestral homeland of Ukraine sits at the crossroads of many important travel, economic and political influences.  It has been so, since forever, it seems.  So, with international opportunities beaconing from every corner of the globe, Ukrainians, like every other people, have chased, emigrated, resettled, re-acclimatized, and re-assessed their "cultural inheritance".  I mean that quite broadly, though.  " Pobutove zhittya" is probably a better descriptor than "culture", but even that needs explaining.

In this particular context I am defining culture as "everything people can pass on to ensure their progeny thrive in the future".  So when helping pack some of her things, we had to anticipate her needs, in the short term, and perhaps longer.  Then to look at all of our collected stuff, and consider what would be hers to inherit. Besides the coffee maker and towels, what could we give her to sustain her, comfort her, and prepare her for life - for it happens without our invitation.  Change happens, but somebody recently told me, it is the small stuff that reveals what a person is made of.  If so, what truly authentic messages will her "stuff" reveal about her ancestral inheritance?  About us, her parents, grandparents, great grandparents?

I was speaking with a cousin in Winnipeg, and she suggested that every child of hers would have a newly embroidered pillow, for the living room sofa.  Taking a traditional pattern, going monochromatic with the color scheme, graphic and modernly finished.......

One of her grandparents gave her a painting referring to home-ie. Ukraine. A montage of events around church, the sights, smells, and spirituality a thousand years or two in the making.  Memories of blessing baskets, eating kutia, that kind of thing.

Another family member wanted to send jars of borsch.  Food, they say, is the most tenacious of the cultural elements, because it hangs around in the memories of home, comfort and love.  Actually, my daughter makes better varenyky than I do, but nobody makes better jam than baba.

And, knowing how much fun it can be to move big bulky stuff, I sent pysanky which can sit in a bowl on the counter to remind her of the many hours we sat together dreaming of what the future would bring. The "masterpiece in the hand", the "ikon of the universe" may prove to be a conversation piece, perhaps someday someone will ask what the whirls, crosses, circles, deer, wheat, and flowers signify?

What does a family give their child who is leaving, not just an airplane trip away, but a world away, like my great grandparents did over a century ago?  What "stuff" sustained them to the degree that many generations later, we still identify with their journey? Many Ukrainian immigrations ago it was said that a person could survive with two books in hand, the Bible and Taras Shevchenko's Kobzar!   How about your family and the travails that have brought them to their Ukrainian Calgary adventure?  What really important message is hidden in the gifts you will leave in your packing trunk?

Posted by Unknown at 11:33 No comments:
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Labels: Alberta Ukrainian, ancestry, Immigration, Pysanky, Ukrainian Culture, Ukrainian Embroidery, Ukrainian Food

Sunday, 8 July 2012

BORSHCH FEST - Ukrainian Male Chorus

The Ukrainian Male Chorus of Edmonton was recently in Southern Alberta on their mission to promote Ukrainian Music to the world.  Their trip to Banff, with the free admission performance was a great opportunity to reconnect with the past.  The significance of Southern Alberta in the Ukrainian Canadian experience is a treasure of stories, mostly untold - perhaps time to reveal a snapshot?  Stories of opportunity, adventure, sacrifice, contributions and resilience!

Did you know how many Ukrainian labourers were involved in the building of the Banff Cave and Basin Hot Springs facility?  Did you know about the internment camp at Castle Mountain?  Well, a look into Ukrainian Canadian history, and a glimpse at the huge migration of Ukrainian immigrants to the southern Alberta region say, a hundred years ago tells an important story.
The choir also came to sing the responses to the Liturgy at St. Vladimir's Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Calgary.  With the impromptu performance of Ukrainian folk songs after the Liturgy and Coffee Fellowship, the choir showcased its versatility, excellence, and great passion for the Choral Tradition of Ukraine, and Choral Tradition of Western Canada.  The experienced, yet fresh and enthusiastic approach to Ukrainian Choral Music in Canada's 2012 - what a gift!

If you enjoy this Ukrainian Choral Tradition, perhaps the Ukrainian Male Chorus's next big event is for you?

They are holding a special event called  Borshch Fest - Do Not Wear White on Saturday, October 13, 2012 at 6PM at St. John's Cultural Centre - 10611-110 Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta.  Make sure you get your tickets soon - it's bound to be a lively and entertaining cultural event! 
I hope they make it a tradition!! 




Tickets: $40 - Buy 10 and you get to reserve a Table! Be the first on your block! Tickets are limited, so don't delay!

6 pm - Cocktails and borsh...ch tasting
7 pm - Celebrity Cook-off, judging, and performance by Ukrainian Male Chorus of Edmonton
9 pm - Dance by Barvinok
10:15 pm - Lunch

For tickets please contact:
Bo: 780-717-3609
Dave: 780-863-8877
umctickets@gmail.comSee
Posted by Unknown at 11:49 No comments:
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Labels: Canadian Ukrainian Music, Choral Music Calgary, Ukrainian Calgary, Ukrainian Church, Ukrainian Liturgy, Ukrainian Male Chorus, Ukrainian Music
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      • Musical Director Position in Calgary
      • Lest We Forget - The Ukrainian Holodomor
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