Print preview Close

Showing 48 results

archival descriptions
Metropolitan Maxim Hermaniuk fonds Manitoba Image
Print preview View:

48 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

First Communion Class, Rev. Pulak

Father Joseph Pulak and an unidentified female teacher pose with students in Brandon, on the grounds of the Nativity of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church, known at the time as St. Mary's Ukrainian Catholic Church. The black and white print is in very good condition, with a few marks, affixed to a light coloured cardboard frame. Oversized.

Rev. Joseph Pulak and First Communion Class, Brandon

Father Joseph Pulak with the Holy Communion class of the Nativity of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church in Brandon, Manitoba. The church was known at the time as St. Mary's Ukrainian Catholic Church. Black and white print in good condition, with the photographer's stamp on the back.

Blessing of the Crosses

Blessing of the Cross at St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church, Cook's Creek, Manitoba, 1938. The home parish of the architect, Father Philip Ruh, OMI, the church was renamed the Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1952. The photo shows the church under scaffolding, with a large crowd present for the ceremony. Black and white print is in fair condition, with creases. Metropolitan Maxim Hermaniuk has written "Cook's Creek, Man" in ink, in Ukrainian on the back.

Rev. Joseph Pulak and First Communion Class

Father Joseph Pulak with students, including the Holy Communion class of the Nativity of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church in Brandon, Manitoba, August 13, 1937. The church was known at the time as St. Mary's Ukrainian Catholic Church. Black and white print in good condition with the photographer's stamp on the back.

Metropolitan Maxim Hermaniuk fonds

  • Fonds
  • 1911-1996

The Metropolitan Maxim Hermaniuk fonds is comprised of papers from all phases of his life, study, and vocation in Europe and in Canada. The textual material includes extensive studies of local, national, and international importance in wide-ranging areas of social interest; official documents of the pre-Vatican and Vatican II Councils; correspondence from the private to the official level throughout his lifetime; material tracing preparation for the Papal visit to Canada in 1984, and the Millennium of Christianity in Ukraine celebrated in 1988; and numerous publications either written by Metropolitan Hermaniuk, or of interest to him.
The fonds is comprised of numerous reports, appeals, media articles, and documents both preliminary and officially created in the course of decision-making, in the course of guiding, supporting, teaching, and inspiring clergy as well as lay people in the Church. As the spiritual and administrative head of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada and an influential participant in the councils of Vatican II, Metropolitan Hermaniuk lived through a time of change at the highest levels, illustrated by his papers. Spanning much of the twentieth century, the papers at the same time extraordinarily document life itself, especially during the last half of that century

Hermaniuk, Maxim, 1911-1996

Fiftieth Anniversary of Ukrainians in Canada, Group Photo in Mountain Road

A large group, including adults of all ages and children, are gathered close to the Patronage of the Blessed Virgin Mary Ukrainian Catholic Church, known at the time as St. Mary's Ukrainian Catholic Church, in Mountain Road, Manitoba. Father Joseph Pulak stands behind the children, slightly left of centre. An unidentified priest stands to his right. Superimposed above the crowd are Bishop Nykyta Budka, to the left, Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytskyj, centre; Bishop Basil Ladyka, to the right. Superimposed in the bottom foreground are the word printed in Ukrainian: "Fiftieth Anniversary Jubilee of Ukrainians in Canada, Mountain Road, Man. 1941". The black and white print is in excellent condition.

Results 1 to 10 of 48