News & Announcements

Camp St. Volodymyr

Camp St. Volodymyr [ 2012.04.29 ]

CAMP ST. VOLODYMYR – August 20 – 27th, 2012 Check out our new website: http://www.wix.com/jennsawka/campstvolodymyr#!cvcvvg|mainPage Camp St. Volodymyr has been enriching campers in their Ukraini...

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BC is going to Unity

BC is going to Unity [ 2012.02.20 ]

Unity is a gathering of Ukrainian Catholics from across Canada to further understand, embrace and celebrate our faith through prayer, education and fellowship. Unity is open to young adults 18 (1994) ...

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UGCC Synod Pays Special Attention to Celebration of 120th Anniversary of Birth of Patriarch Josyf Slipyj

[ 2012.02.13 ]

On February 8-9, 2012, in Lviv-Briukhovychi, the 56тг session of the Synod of Bishops of the Kyiv-Halych Supreme Archbishopric of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church was held. The Synod was preceded...

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Official Logo Unveiled for World Youth Day 2013

Official Logo Unveiled for World Youth Day 2013 [ 2012.02.13 ]

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, FEB. 9, 2012 (Zenit.org).- The colors of the Brazilian flag and the famous Christ the Redeemer statue of Rio de Janeiro form part of the official logo for World Youth Day 2013,...

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Graduate and Doctoral Study Courses to Be Opened at Ukrainian Catholic University

Graduate and Doctoral Study Courses to Be Opened at Ukrainian Catholic University [ 2012.02.04 ]

The head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, Patriarch Sviatoslav Shevchuk, celebrated a liturgy at the Ukrainian Catholic University on February 2, the press service of UCUreported. The primate a...

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A Message from Catholic Health Association of BC

[ 2012.01.13 ]

The Catholic Health Association of BC will be awarding two bursaries valued at $250 each to two 2012 graduating students enrolled in a Catholic secondary school, or who are a member of a BC or Yukon p...

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Fourteen UGCC bishops participate in meeting of European bishops of Eastern Rite Catholic Churches

[ 2011.11.11 ]

This year’s meeting of bishops of Eastern Rite Catholic Churches, which is held annually under the auspices of the Council of European Bishops’ Conferences, is being held November 3-6, in ...

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KATERI TEKAKWITHA: First Native North American Saint

VATICAN CITY, 20 DEC 2011 (VIS) – The Holy Father yesterday signed decrees acknowledging miracles attributed to the intervention of seven blesseds (four women and three men) who will shortly be canonised. One of the new blesseds is Kateri Tekakwitha, the first native North American to be raised to the glory of the altars.
Kateri Tekakwitha was born in 1656 in Ossernenon (present-day Auriesville, U.S.A.). Her father was a Mohawk chief and her mother a Roman Catholic Algonquian who had been educated by French missionaries. At the age of four she lost her family in a smallpox epidemic which also left her disfigured and with poor eyesight. Adopted by a relative, the chief of neighbouring clan, she continued to nurture an interest in Christianity and was baptised at the age of 20.
The members of her tribe did not understand her new religious affiliation and she was marginalised, practising physical mortification as a path of sanctity and praying for the conversion of her relatives. Having suffered persecutions which put her life at risk, she was forced to flee to a native American Christian community in Kahnawake, Quebec where she made a vow of chastity and lived a life dedicated to prayer, penance, and care for the sick and elderly. She died in 1680 at the age of 24. Her last words were: “Jesus, I love you”. According to tradition, Kateri’s scars disappeared after her death to reveal a woman of great beauty, and numerous sick people who participated in her funeral were miraculously healed.
The process of canonisation began in 1884. She was declared venerable by Pius XII in 1943 and beatified by John Paul II in 1980. As the first native North American to be beatified she occupies a special place in the devotion of her people. Her feast day falls on 14 July.
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