Clergy of the Eparchy of Toronto and Eastern Canada

Here you will be able to read more about the clergy serving our faithful

Ukrainian Catholic Religious and Monastic Communities on the Territory of the Eparchy of Toronto and Eastern Canada

The Sister Servants of Mary Immaculate

The Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate, a Ukrainian Catholic apostolic congregation, are called to be witnesses of Christ, living out His Gospel through sharing our lives with each other as a community, in prayer, love and service.

The Sisters are called to respond with openness in a spirit of trust, humility, simplicity, hospitality and joy in service of God’s people, primarily but not exclusively, those of the Ukrainian Catholic Church.

SSMI In Canada

The Sisters began their work in Ukraine over 125 years ago, but soon after, responded to needs beyond Ukraine, beginning in Canada. When the first four Sisters arrived in Alberta in 1902, they quickly became a light to many Ukrainian immigrants helping them to adjust to their new homeland. These pioneer Sisters opened schools, began parish work, and ministered to the sick and needy. The Sisters taught the children as well as the parents to read and to flourish in their rich spiritual and cultural heritage.

In the spirit of their founders and reading the signs of the times, the Sisters continue to respond to the needs of the Church. Remaining faithful to their charism and their founders’ words, “Serve where the need is the greatest,” their original ministries of education, health care and parish ministry in all its facets continue in new forms, adapted to current situations.

Ukrainian Basilian Fathers (OSBM)

Toronto

Basilians arrived in Toronto in 1949, when the printing press was moved from Mundare, AB. The first priests were Volodymyr Shewchuk and Bernard Dribnenky, who at first were involved with the printing press and edited a monthly magazine. Eventually, at the request of the local bishop, they came to be more involved in direct pastoral work. Father Bernard Dribnenky organized the parish of St. Basil the Great, which eventually became the seed from which sprang the St. Basil the Great College and St. Volodymyr parish in Thornhill. The Basilian Press closed its Toronto office in the summer of 2016.

St. Basil the Great College was a high school built in 1962 on the grounds of a large parcel of land in Weston, most of which could not be developed because it was a flood plain. Originally intended as a boarding school for boys, it soon became a local high school, never fully developing its potential for exclusive service to the Ukrainian Catholic Church. As part of the local Catholic school board, it was eventually closed as being too small to operate economically. The Basilian monastery on Weston Rd. was closed in 2016.

St. Volodymyr parish in the suburb of Thornhill was established in an unused Roman Catholic church of St. Luke along with adjoining cemetery, and began providing a home to almost 200 parishioners who had moved away from the downtown parish of St. Basil. Father Volodymyr Shewchuk began services in 1972. When a priest wasn’t living on site, the priests from the monastery next to St. Basil’s College would provide pastoral services. The Basilians handed the parish over to the Eparchy in 2016.

Ottawa

The capital of Canada has a parish, St. John the Baptist, that today boasts a stylish church on the banks of the Rideau Canal. Basilians provided temporary pastors from 1938 to 1948. A permanent arrangement was reached in 1958 after the Basilians relinquished their parishes in Montreal. Ottawa was not a stranger to Basilians because of the excellent University founded by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Basilian students lived at the seminary adjacent to the philosophy department of the University, and eventually purchased the former home of the Apostolic Delegate to Canada of the Holy See, a solid building reputed to have been built by Colonel Bytown, founder of what became known as Ottawa. The building is no more, but the legacy perhaps lives on in the new church. Currently St. John the Baptist Shrine is the only parish in our Eparchy served by the Basilian Fathers.

 

en_USEnglish