Basil (Fedak)
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Metropolitan Wasyly or Basil, ( secular name William Fedak; November 1, 1909 – January 10, 2005) was the Primate of the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada The Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada (UOCC; french: Église orthodoxe ukrainienne du Canada) is an Eastern Orthodox church in Canada, primarily consisting of Orthodox Ukrainian Canadians. Its former name (before 1990) was the Ukrainian Greek ...
(UOCC) from 1985 until his death in 2005. Metropolitan Wasyly (Vasylii) was born Vasyl' Fedak on November 1, 1909, in
Kadubivtsi Kadubivtsi ( uk, Кадубівці; ro, Cadobești) is a village in Chernivtsi Raion, Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine. It hosts the administration of Kadubivtsi rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Until 18 July 2020, Kadubivtsi belonged ...
in Austrian-ruled northern Bukovina (now Chernivtsi Oblast in Ukraine). Together with his parents and five siblings, he immigrated to Canada and settled in
Sheho Sheho ( 2016 population: ) is a village in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan within the Rural Municipality of Viscount No. 341 and Census Division No. 9. Sheho is located on Saskatchewan Highway 16 (the Yellowhead highway), in southeast Sask ...
, Saskatchewan. In young adulthood, he became a teacher: a career that lasted 14 years. He then studied at a seminary of the UOCC from 1941 to 1944. He was ordained into the diaconate on September 27, 1944, and shortly thereafter into the priesthood on October 1. As a priest, he served parishes in Manitoba and Ontario. In 1951, he arrived in Hamilton, Ontario to serve the parish of
St. Vladimir Vladimir I Sviatoslavich or Volodymyr I Sviatoslavych ( orv, Володимѣръ Свѧтославичь, ''Volodiměrъ Svętoslavičь'';, ''Uladzimir'', russian: Владимир, ''Vladimir'', uk, Володимир, ''Volodymyr''. Se ...
. He served this parish for 29 years, seeing the parish grow from 47 to 500 families. His wife, Paraskeviya Tymofij, whom he married in 1932, died in April 1976. Two years later, an Extraordinary Sobor (general council) of the UOCC elected him as its candidate for bishop. On July 16, 1978, he was consecrated as the bishop of Saskatoon at Holy Trinity Cathedral in Winnipeg by Metropolitan Andrew (Metiuk)of Winnipeg, Archbishop Borys (Yakovkevych), and Bishop Mykolai (Debryn)]of Toronto. Following the death of then Archbishop Mykolai in 1981, Bishop Wasyly became the acting bishop of the Eastern Eparchy. He was elevated to Archbishop of Toronto in 1983. Then in 1985, the 17th Sobor of the UOCC selected Wasyly to be its metropolitan and primate with the honorific ''His Beatitude'' (because he was the head of his own church. After the UOCC joined the Patriarchate of Constantinople, the honorific for metropolitans is now ''His Eminence''), and he will be the last hierarch (bishop) to hold that title in the UOCC, as decided by Patriarch Bartholemew I. As primate, he was the spiritual leader of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada and Chancellor of its seminary, St. Andrew's College. Under the leadership of Metropolitan Wasyly, the UOCC came into
full communion Full communion is a communion or relationship of full agreement among different Christian denominations that share certain essential principles of Christian theology. Views vary among denominations on exactly what constitutes full communion, but ...
with the Patriarchate of Constantinople in 1990. In 1993, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. Metropolitan Wasyly reposed on January 10, 2005. His funeral took place on January 21–22 at Holy Trinity Metropolitan Cathedral in Winnipeg. He is buried at Glen Eden Cemetery. With his wife Parskeviya, he had three sons: Eugene (who has served on the church's Consistory board twice), Yaroslaw and Emil.


References


External links


Obituary from UOCC



Hamilton Gallery of Distinction
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wasyly, Metropolitan 1909 births 2005 deaths Officers of the Order of Canada Eastern Orthodox bishops in Canada Canadian Eastern Orthodox bishops Ukrainian emigrants to Canada Primates of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada 20th-century Eastern Orthodox archbishops 21st-century Eastern Orthodox archbishops