The Ukrainian Community
in Toronto
from World War One to 1971
By: Andrew Gregorovich
From: Polyphony Summer 1984 pp. 123-126
© 1984 Multicultural History Society of Ontario
In 1984 the City of Toronto celebrates the 150th anniversary
of its incorporation as a city, which had originally been founded in 1793
as the town of York. In its growth as a meeting-place of many cultures and
ethnic groups, Toronto has attracted a large and growing Ukrainian population
which totals 80,000 in the metropolitan area. In the 1971 Census Ukrainians
with a population of 60,750, or 2.3 per cent, were the sixth largest group
in Metro Toronto, following the British (56.9 per cent), Italian (10.3 per
cent), German (4.4 per cent), Jewish (4.2 per cent) and French (3.6 per
cent).
Since Ukrainians in Toronto constitute over 10 per cent of all Ukrainians
in Canada they have a considerable impact on the entire Ukrainian Canadian
community. The earliest Ukrainians to settle in Toronto around the turn
of the century lived in the two major immigrant reception areas: I) St.
John's Ward (Yonge University, Queen-College Streets) with Ukrainians settling
in the south on such streets as Terauley (now Bay), Alice (where the Eaton's
Centre is today), Elizabeth and Elm; 2) The Junction area in west Toronto
on streets such as Franklin, Edwin, Perth, Edith and Royce (later Dupont).
After World War One the community started to expand and resettle west along
Queen Street with an axis at Bathurst. This became the main Ukrainian community
area in Toronto from 1920 into the 1960s with almost all the major organisations
and churches located here. Such streets as Denison, Augusta, Lippincott
and, further west, Palmerston and Euclid were heavily populated by Ukrainians
who bought, rented, or boarded in these locales. In the early days they
were called Bukovinians, Galicians and Ruthenians.
By 1920 Ukrainians were settled in an area on King Street East and others
such as Duchess and Dalhousie. In the 1920-30s there were also Ukrainians
in an area south of Queen in the Niagara-Tecumseth triangle. In the interwar
period colonies started in Mimico-New Toronto-Long Branch and from 1932
in the farm area of Scarborough-Agincourt at Warden Avenue to escape the
depression in the city.
The third immigration and new citizens from the prairies led, in the 1960s,
to settlements west from Dufferin to Jane Street and the creation of the
Bloor West Village, which is becoming the new focus of the Ukrainian community
in Toronto. By 1976 the area north of Bloor to Annette and from Keele Street
west to Baby Point was over 10 per cent Ukrainian in population.
The first Ukrainians to settle in Toronto probably came about 1900 to work
as labourers rather than settle on the prairies as pioneer homesteaders.
Theodore Humeniuk, in 1938, identified the first three Ukrainian immigrants
who came in 1903 as Panko Ostapovich, Vasyl' Netrebko and Adam Strykhalsky.
However, in an interview, he mentioned that there were earlier immigrants
whose names he did not know. A century ago there were some individuals in
Toronto who traced their origin to Ukraine. For example, Charles G. Horetzky,
born in Scotland of a Ukrainian father, was living in Toronto in 1888 at
166 Cumberland Street. In 1891 he built a house at 88 Bedford Road, which
is listed by the Toronto Historical Board in its Inventory of Buildings
of Architectural and Historical Importance. In the 1870s Horetzky was an
engineer who accompanied the Sandford Fleming expedition surveying a route
for the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Rocky Mountains. He was a noted
photographer.
The importance of the church in the life of Toronto's Ukrainian community
may be judged from the fact that the first building that Ukrainians erected
in Toronto was a church. This was St. Josaphat's Ukrainian Catholic Church
(now a cathedral) built, 1913-14, on Franklin Street in the Junction area
of west Toronto. The first Ukrainian Catholic Divine Liturgy was probably
celebrated in 1909 in Toronto by Father Ivan Zaklynsky in a small brick
house on the southeast corner of Edith and Edwin Avenue just three blocks
from St. Josaphat's. In 1909 a letter from the president of the Catholic
Church Extension Society to Archbishop McEvay of Toronto expressed a need
for a Ukrainian (he used the old term Ruthenian) bishop, priests and a paper
to save them from the Protestants, indicating that the number and plight
of the Ukrainians were sufficient to concern the Roman Catholic church leaders.
The parish committee, in 1911-12, was led by Harasym Sukota who had come
to Toronto in 1904. He enlisted the aid of prominent individuals such as
Father Lev Sembratowicz of Buffalo who found the Ukrainian Catholic spiritual
life "at a low ebb" in west Toronto. It was energetic Father Joseph
Boyarchuk, the parish priest, who organised the building of the church.
It was consecrated by the first Ukrainian bishop in Canada, Nicetas Budka,
and opened on April 14, 1914. A church choir was established for the formal
opening ceremony, and as such became the first Ukrainian choir in Toronto.
The church rapidly became a cultural, social and educational centre with
the choir, orchestra, drama circle, school and religious events, such as
weddings, baptisms and funerals.
Downtown Ukrainians were much slower in organising their religious life.
Father A. Sarmatiuk, priest of St. Josaphat's in 1925, initiated regular
liturgy services for the Ukrainian Catholic faithful at St. Mary's Roman
Catholic Church at Bathurst and Adelaide. This led to the establishment
of the second Ukrainian Catholic parish in1928. An old Pentecostal church
hall was purchased at 276 Bathurst and was named St. Mary's Dormitian Ukrainian
Catholic Church. In 1937 a third Ukrainian Catholic parish was founded in
east Toronto and became the Holy Eucharist Church, located in a former French
church at 436 King Street East.
Although the majority of Ukrainians are Orthodox by religion (89 per cent)
and the minority Eastern-Rite Catholic (10 per cent; 40 million to 4.7 million
respectively in the 1930s), the situation is reversed in Canada. The majority
of Ukrainian immigrants to Canada came from Galicia in West Ukraine where
the Ukrainian Catholic church was dominant. Only those immigrants who came
from Bukovina, Volhynia, Polisia and East, or Great, Ukraine were predominantly
Orthodox. When the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church was founded in Canada
in 1918, it attracted considerable numbers of Ukrainian Catholic faithful.
The first Ukrainian Orthodox mass in Ukrainian was celebrated in Toronto
by Father Petro Bilon on November 14, 1926 in the Church of St. John the
Baptist (Garrison Church) on the southwest corner of Portland and Stewart
Streets. Theodore Humeniuk had arranged the service, which attracted 200
people. Two weeks earlier an initiatory committee had been established by
members of the Ukrainian People' s Home. In 1927 space was rented at 137
Richmond Street and 382 King Street West, but the cost of rent left no funds
to support a priest, so Father Bilon was forced to leave for Edmonton. During
the next four years, as funds permitted, Rev. V. Sliuzar was invited from
Montreal to serve Toronto. In 1931 Theodore Humeniuk, the first Ukrainian
lawyer in Toronto, became president of the parish and in spite of the depression
managed to establish regular services in Syrian and Anglican churches with
Rev. Dmytro Leshchyshyn as parish priest. Services were held at 631 Crawford
Street and at 180 Simcoe Street until April 1, 1938 when St. Vladimir's
Ukrainian Orthodox Church moved into its own building at 404 Bathurst Street.
A decade later a church building committee, headed by Dr. Elias Wachna,
formally opened St. Vladimir Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral on May 7, 1948.
The growth of the Ukrainian community in New Toronto-Long Branch in the
1930s led to a meeting in 1940 chaired by S. Dovhanyk which decided there
was a need for a church. A parish was founded and the official opening and
dedication of St. Demetrius Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Long Branch took
place on Sunday May 11, 1958.
The third Orthodox parish in the city was the Ukrainian Orthodox Church
of St. Andrew, founded in 1950 and located at Dupont and Edwin Avenue in
west Toronto.
Several organisations have been established in cooperation with and in support
of the Ukrainian Orthodox church. The Toronto branches of the Ukrainian
Self-Reliance Association (SUS) and the Ukrainian Women' s Association of
Canada were founded in 1927. In 1936 a branch of the Ukrainian Youth Association
of Canada (SUMK) was established. St. Vladimir Institute, a student residence
on Spadina Avenue near the University of Toronto campus, was established
in 1944 and has become a community centre with an art gallery, a large well-organised
library, a drama theatre and many other activities.
In Toronto the two traditional churches in 1971 counted 58.1 per cent of
Ukrainians as their parishioners with Ukrainian Catholics at 23,565 (38.8
per cent) and Ukrainian Orthodox at 11,700 (19.3 per cent). Some 14 per
cent of Ukrainians in Toronto were Roman Catholic, 9.1 per cent were United
Church, 5.2 per cent were Anglican and 1.9 per cent were Presbyterian. The
traditional churches of Ukraine have been losing their predominance with
Ukrainian Catholics decreasing from 57.4 per cent in 1931 to 38.8 per cent
in 1971. The Ukrainian Orthodox church has gone from 10.6 per cent in 1931
up to 27.1 per cent in 1951 and then down to 19.3 per cent in 1971.
During the first decade of the century, the Ukrainian community in Toronto
became large enough to establish its first institutions: a church, a printing
press, a bookstore (1910) and an organisation. It was on October 10, 1910
that the Rus'ko-Ukrains'ke Tovarystvo Sv. Mykhaila v Toronti was established
and in the following year, on November 27, 1911, it was chartered under
the name the Ruthenian National Benefit Society. For a decade it served
as a fraternal insurance organisation providing social welfare support for
destitute immigrants until a Vzaimna Pomich branch took over the responsibility.
It also served as a focus for many other social and cultural activities.
A drama club was formed and in 1916-17 presented eight plays, nineteen programs
and a picnic.
On June 10, 1917 a new educational and cultural organisation was founded
by forty-one members: Chytal'nia Prosvity im. T. Shevchenka v Toronti (T.
Shevchenko Enlightenment Reading Room in Toronto). Prosvita was the major
organisation in West Ukraine, which published books, magazines, established
lectures and libraries to assist in the self-education of the people. The
Toronto Prosvita established a library with 134 books donated by V. Farnya
and D.A. Nykoliak. Music teacher Michael Z'ombra founded the Mykola Lysenko
Music Society which was active in 1921.
In 1920 the Ukrainian Red Cross was organised to provide relief assistance
to Ukrainians devastated by World War One and the war on Ukrainian territory
between Poland and Soviet Russia which ended the independence of Ukraine.
In 1921 Paul Crath arranged an exhibit of Ukrainian folk art at the Canadian
National Exhibition (CNE). The Ukrainian women of Prosvita took it over
the next year and Ukrainian embroidery became an established part of the
annual exhibit. This exhibit continued annually for thirty years until 1951.
In 1922 and 1923 a choir performed at the CNE directed by D. Metelsky and
N. Yurechkiv. In 1924 the choir was conducted by Yuri Hassan, a singer with
the famous Koshetz Choir. In 1923 Yulian Kunekevich collected a group of
young people and led them in a "koliada"-Christmas carolling for
Ukrainians in the Queen-King, Spadina-Bathurst Streets area.
In nine years Prosvita presented 57 plays, 11 concerts, 46 dances, 9 scholarly
lectures, 4 political meetings and 6 picnics. Between 1921-26 the Prosvita
drama group presented two performances of every program, one Saturday downtown
the next at St. Josaphat's. The members of Prosvita felt the lack of their
own hall, and Marian Kunekevich and Theodore Humeniuk started gathering
financial support until, in 1927, a Salvation Army building at 191 Lippincott
Street, partly damaged by fire, was formally opened and became the major
cultural and social centre for the community until the 1950s.
The first major Ukrainian folk-dance performance was presented in 1924 at
the Canadian National Exhibition by members of Prosvita. The following year
Vasile Avramenko arrived on December 12, 1925 and established his first
school of Ukrainian dance. A critic for the TORONTO STAR reviewed a February
1926 performance and said "the pattern of the dances was always beautiful."
Also in 1926 a spectacular performance of eighty dancers and musicians was
presented at the CNE for 25,000 people.
Prosvita/Ukrainian National Home had activities for women and youth, a Ukrainian
school, it supported National Ukrainian causes with financial assistance
and was politically active. From 1930-36 there were annual four-day Prosvita
book and press exhibits with 2,200 items on display. Among the honorary
members of the Ukrainian National Home was C.H.J. Snider, the editor of
the TORONTO EVENING TELEGRAM, who felt so much at home in the building that
he called himself a "Ukrainian." In July 1926 a Ukrainian Reading
Society Prosvita was founded in west Toronto and became a focal point of
activity in the area with its own hall at 105A Edwin Avenue. It was here
on April 10, 1934 that the West Toronto Branch of the Ukrainian National
Federation (UNF) was founded. It supported a Ukrainian school, a drama club
and a brass band.
In the interwar period one of the major new community organisations was
the Ukrainian National Federation, founded in 1932. The Toronto branch was
established on May 9, 1933 in the home of O. Havriluk at 72 Denison Avenue
with Roman Musy as president. A "ridna shkola" (Ukrainian primary
school) and a Ukrainian secondary school were sponsored up until 1974. The
Boyan Choir, Kalyna Dance Ensemble and a drama club were formed. In the
1940s a library was formed and today is one of the largest in Toronto. The
Tryzub (Trident) sports club sponsored a soccer team. Affiliated organisations
include the Ukrainian War Veterans' Association, the Ukrainian Women' s
Organisation and the Ukrainian National Youth Federation. The NEW PATHWAY,
Ukrainian weekly, is published by the UNF and has sponsored, since 1944,
the Ukrainian (Toronto) Credit Union, which is the largest in Canada with
9,322 members and $67 million in assets. During World War Two the branch
was located in the ULFTA Hall at 300 Bathurst Street, which had been confiscated
from the communist organisation by the Government of Canada. On June 16,
1950 the UNF opened its large hall at 297 College Street.
The Ukrainian Social Democratic party in 1911 established a branch in Toronto
with eighteen members, which lasted only three months, but was reorganised
in 1912. By 1917 there were 200 members, of which eighty-six were arrested
because of the war, and several separate groups of different political views
(socialists, anarchists, etc.) were formed. Finally the Ukrainian Labour
Temple was established in 1921 and became integrated in the Ukrainian Labour-Farmer
Temple Association. In the fall of 1927 the Ukrainian Labour Temple building
at 300 Bathurst Street was opened. It became a centre for Ukrainians who
sympathized with the USSR. A West Toronto branch was also established in
the 1920s, located in a hall on Dupont Street.
The ULFTA, which is now called the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians,
grew rapidly during the depression of the1930s. Sympathetic to the communist
ideology, by the end of the1930s, there were members and sympathizers who
numbered in the thousands. When World War Two broke out in 1939, it was
opposed by the ULFTA and the Government of Canada interned its leaders and
sold its properties. The Ukrainian National Federation occupied the Labour
Temple until after the war when it was returned by pressure on the government
since the USSR was a wartime ally. The temple was the scene of some violent
encounters between communist ULFTA and nationalist UNF members. The surge
created by the victory of World War Two in 1945, with Canada and the USSR
as allies against Nazi Germany, reached a peak with a large victory rally
July 1, 1945, demonstrating the size and strength of the AUUC. Confrontations
between communists and nationalists did lead to some limited violence. For
example, on October 8, 1950 during a concert at the Ukrainian Labour Temple
on Bathurst Street, a bomb exploded. Eleven persons were injured but none
seriously.
The foundation of the Toronto branch of the Ukrainian Canadian Committee
on February 21, 1941 established a central coordinating body for the entire
community except for communists. Although church relations between Catholic
and Orthodox had been tense, even hostile, in the 1920s and 1930s, election
of Father Peter Kamenetsky of the Ukrainian Catholic community as honorary
president and Theodore Humeniuk of the Orthodox community as president indicated
the growing sense of a united community of interest among Ukrainians in
Toronto.
The end of World War Two found many Ukrainians in Germany and other central
European countries. They had been brought to Germany for slave labour, were
interned in concentration and death camps, or fled from the advancing Soviet
armies. A relief program was mounted and Toronto churches and organisations
established committees which provided relief parcels for the suffering Displaced
Persons (DPS) from Ukraine. From 1946-60, when the bulk of DP immigrants
who settled in Metro Toronto came, 12,570 settled in the city with 7,215-the
great majority-males. It appears that about half of all DP immigration to
Canada settled in Metro Toronto and perhaps three-quarters in Ontario.
In 1971 there were in the city 17,185 persons born in eastern Europe and
Ukraine, 2,275 born in western Europe (many in DP camps) and 845 in the
United Kingdom. There were also 240 born in the United States. Out of a
total of 60,750 Ukrainian Torontonians in 1971, some 27,910 were born in
Ontario, and 11,595 were from other provinces, mainly the prairies.
The Ukrainian population of Toronto has grown considerably since the 1921
Census recorded 1,149 (0.2 per cent) in the city and 1,247 (0.2 per cent)
in the Metro area. By 1961 the number of Ukrainians in the city increased
to 26,097 (3.9 per cent), and in Metro there were 46,650 (2.6 per cent).
But in 1971 Ukrainians in Toronto had decreased by 3,477 from the previous
census to 22,620 (3 . 2 per cent), reflecting the upward mobility of the
community resulting in an exodus to the suburban areas of Etobicoke and
Mississauga. In 1971 the Ukrainian population had reached 60,755 (2.3 per
cent). From 1921-51 the Ukrainian population doubled every census. In 1971
the City of Toronto had the largest Ukrainian population with 22,620 (3.2
per cent) and second was the Borough of Etobicoke with 11,985 (4.2 per cent).
Scarborough with 5,265 (1.6 per cent) and Peel County with 5,225 (2.1 per
cent) were comparable. North York had 6 ,280 (1. 2 per cent), York Borough
had 3 ,930 (2.7 per cent) and York County (part) 1,935 (1.4 per cent). Halton
County (part) had 1,675 (1.7 per cent), East York had 1,275 ( 1. 2 per cent)
and Ontario County had 570 (1.2 per cent).
The arrival of thousands of new immigrants revitalized the activities of
some of the old organisations and led to the creation of many major new
organisations in Toronto. The community was well organised with churches,
associations, community halls, a newspaper, a bookstore and a well-established
and receptive community. The rapid growth of the community created pressure
on the existing facilities and very soon new organisations, newspapers,
bookstores and churches were established. The major associations formed
by the new immigrants were the League for the Liberation of Ukraine and
the Ukrainian Youth Association (SUM) in 1948, which presently have a large
Ukrainian Community Centre on Christie Street. It also founded the newspaper
HOMIN UKRAINY.
Two youth groups were formed: Plast Ukrainian Youth Association, which is
a guide and scout type of organisation, and the Organisation of Democratic
Ukrainian Youth (ODUM). In 1949 the Shevchenko Scientific Society elected
its first Canadian executive with Professor E. Wertyporoch as president.
Canadian veterans returning from the war formed the Ukrainian Canadian Veterans
Association (UCVA), which was located in Branch No. 360 Royal Canadian Legion
with S. Pawluk as president. Some Ukrainian organisations, such as the AUUC,
were eclipsed.
The Ukrainian community press expanded in circulation and number of publications,
three museums were established or expanded, seven bookstores flourished
and four libraries. By the 1970s the boom had ended, and three bookstores
closed their doors. In their place a growth of interest in painting and
fine arts led to four art galleries being opened to serve the community.
The size of the Ukrainian community in Toronto, the vast facilities and
finances available to it, its highly trained and competent professionals
and activists all contribute to the impact and considerable influence the
community enjoys in Ukrainian Canadian life. When the Second World Congress
of Free Ukrainians was held in Toronto in 1973, it also indicated the commanding
position the Ukrainian Toronto community has among Ukrainians in the Western
world.
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