Saint John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Shrine

Український Католицький Собор Святого Івана Хрестителя

952 Green Valley Crescent, Ottawa Ontario, K2C 3K7

About Our Parish

St. John the Baptist is the only Ukrainian Catholic Church in Ottawa. The parish has approximately 200 registered families. Because about half the members prefer to follow that Julian calendar, liturgical services are held following both the Julian and Gregorian calendars. All feast days: Christmas, Easter, Epiphany, etc. are celebrated twice – first according to the Gregorian calendar, and then according to the Julian calendar.

In addition to the Parish Council, St. John the Baptist parish has a very active Women’s League (Ukrainian Catholic Women’s League of Canada) and an equally active Knights of Columbus Council (St. Volodymyr the Great Council 9557).

St. John the Baptist also owns a summer camp in the Gatineau Hills, 50km (30miles) north of Ottawa on Newcomb Lake, near St. Pierre de Wakefield.

Pastor

Father Ireneus Prystajecky, OSBM


Funeral in 1956
In 1918, a building on the corner of Rochester and Balsam streets was converted into a church. The new church now under the leadership of Father M. Kuzmak was consecrated by Bishop Nicetas Budka. Photo from 1956.
Saint John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church on Rochester Street in Ottawa in 1964.

History

From the first year of Ukrainian immigration to Canada in 1891, many Ukrainian immigrants visited Ottawa. Some of these immigrants stopped in Ottawa on their journey to Western Canada and found temporary employment. The first permanent Ukrainian residents settled in Ottawa in approximately 1905. They worked on the railway, in the lumber industry, in construction and other manual labour occupations. In 1908, these Ukrainian immigrants founded the Prosvita (education) Association, the first Ukrainian cultural association in Ottawa.

By 1914, there were over 200 Ukrainians in Ottawa. Under the leadership of Rev. J. Fylyma, founding meeting of 70 heads of families was held on October 11, 1914 to organize a Greek- Catholic (the designation for Ukrainian Catholics at that time) parish with a permanent parish priest. The new parish was called the Ruthenian (Latin term for Ukrainians) Catholic Church of St. John the Baptist. Church services were held in a rented Roman Catholic Church on Sussex Street, but in 1916 the church was destroyed by fire. Church services were then held at the Franciscan Fathers chapel on Wellington Street.

In 1918, a building was purchased on the corner of Rochester and Balsam streets and converted into a church. The new church now under the leadership of Father M. Kuzmak was consecrated by Bishop Nicetas Budka. Near the church, another building was erected for use as a Ukrainian school and as the Prosvita cultural center. Under the new leadership of Rev. Wasyl Gegeichuk, the Ukrainian Catholic Parish began to expand its activities in 1919. The cultural center was enlarged and a choir, amateur dramatic circle, mandolin orchestra and dancing club were organized. The parish cultural groups also performed outside the Ukrainian community.

In 1966 the parish moved to a new location on the corner of Carling and Irving and built a hall, which was used as a church, intending to build a church on that site at a later date. However, since that site was too small, and additional land could not be acquired, the present site on Green Valley Crescent was acquired in 1984. This site is ideally suited for the Shrine since it is bordered on the east side by the historic Rideau Canal, and on the south by a major thoroughfare: Heron Road. In 1987, the building of the church was completed and designated as a Sobor (Shrine) and a national monument to commemorate the Millennium of Christianity in Ukraine (988-1988).

The interior decoration of the church (iconography and stained glass windows) began in the fall of 1999, and was completed in December 2000. The main artist was Professor Lubomyr Medvid’ from Lviv, Ukraine. Assisting him was Stepan Yuzefiv. The windows designed by Professor Medvid’ were produced on site by Mykola Shymchuk, Orest Tarnavskyj and Ihor Tarnavskyj, all from Lviv, Ukraine.


Fr. Cyril Mykytiuk, OSBM (1936 2021)

Fr. Cyril
Father Cyril Mykytiuk, O.S.B.M., Pastor

Rev. Fr. Cyril Andrew Mykytiuk, OSBM died peacefully at University Hospital in Edmonton, AB on Tuesday, June 1, 2021. Born Andrew Mykytiuk, on October 15, 1936 in Holden, AB, he entered the Basilian Novitiate in Mundare, AB on October 4, 1954 and made his Solemn Profession of Vows in the Basilian Order of St. Josaphat on September 13, 1959. He was ordained to the Holy Priesthood on July 21, 1963 by Bishop Neil Savaryn, OSBM in Vernon, BC.Fr. Cyril dedicated much of his priestly life to the education of young Catholics enrolled in the Order’s High School, St. BasilTheGreat College School, in Weston, ON, first as a teacher of physics, geology, and math, and then as the School’s VicePrincipal.

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Quotations selected and arranged by Fr. Cyril Mykytiuk, osbm:

Introduction to Christianity | What is Christianity? | Being a Christian | Biography of Jesus