Skip to content
Category

Ukrainian emigrants to Canada

page 1
Cyril Genik
immigration agent (1857-1925)
Bobbie Rosenfeld
Canadian athletics competitor (1904–1969)
Ben Klassen
American engineer, author and politician (1918-1993)
Fedir Bohatyrchuk
Ukrainian chess player (1892–1984)
Alexei Ponikarovsky
Ukrainian-Canadian ice hockey player
Vadim Perelman
American film director
Bohdan Hawrylyshyn
Ukrainian economist (1926–2016)
Olena Kysilevska
Ukrainian journalist, writer, senator (1889-1956)
Yaroslav Hunka
Ukrainian SS Galizien veteran
Ulas Samchuk
Ukrainian writer (1905–1987)
Ivan Lysiak Rudnytsky
Ukrainian-Canadian historian (1919-1984)
Gregory Hlady
Ukrainian actor
Leo Mol
Canadian artist (1915-2009)
Helmut Oberlander
Nazi war criminal, who fought Canadian government efforts to strip him of his Canadian citizenship and deportation to Germany (1924–2021)
Orest Subtelny
Canadian-Ukrainian historian (1941-2016)
Mark Berger
Canadian judoka
Mykola Plaviuk
Ukrainian politician (1925-2012)
Serhy Yekelchyk
Canadian historian
Myroslav Irchan
Ukrainian Esperantist and journalist (1897-1937)
Taras Bulba-Borovets
Ukrainian resistance leader (1908–1981)
Mstyslav (Skrypnyk)
Patriarch of Kyiv and All Rus' (1898–1993)
Alex Shnaider
Canadian financier
Vladimir Katriuk
Alleged Nazi war criminal
Ilarion Ohienko
Ukrainian Orthodox cleric, linguist, church historian, and historian of Ukrainian culture (1882-1972)
Roman Serbyn
Ukrainian-Canadian historian
Kateryna Antonovych
Ukrainian artist and illustrator
Sasha Luccioni
computer scientist
Eugenia Kumacheva
Professor of Chemistry at the University of Toronto
Frederick Andermann
Canadian neurologist (1930–2019)
Jaroslav Rudnyckyj
Ukrainian Canadian linguist and lexicographer
Rezz
Isabelle Rezazadeh (born 28 March 1995), who is known by her stage name Rezz (stylized in all caps), is a Ukrainian–Canadian DJ and record producer from Niagara Falls, Ontario.
Russya
Irina Volodymyrivna Ossaoulenko (; born June 9, 1968), better known by her stage name Russya (), is a Ukrainian singer, and musician. She released her first song ''Don't stand by My Window'' in 1989. Russya had Top 10 hits on the Ukrainian charts in the late 1980s, and through the early and mid 1990s. She was a two-time winner in Best Female Artist of Ukraine in 1990 and 1991. Russya retired from recording pop music in 1997 but continued to tour (sometimes with her sister, Natasha Koroleva) until 1999. In 2007, she returned to recording with an album "The Best of Russya".
A. M. Klein
writer, journalist, lawyer (1909–1972)
Vadim Garbuzov
Ballroom dancer and showman
Alex Semenets
Canadian soccer player
Steve Paproski
Canadian politician and football player (1928-1993)
Wasyly
Primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada
Hilarion (Rudnyk)
Eastern Orthodox bishop
Lubomyr Romankiw
IBM Fellow and researcher
Maxim Hermaniuk
Catholic archbishop (1911–1996)
Andrew Roborecki
Natalia Popova
Ukrainian figure skater
James Temerty
Ukrainian-Canadian businessman and philanthropist
Myron Bereza
Canadian soccer player
Michael
bishop of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada (1885–1977)
Walt Zakaluznyj
Canadian soccer player
Michael Kuchmiak
American bishop
Mira Spivak
Canadian politician
Annie Buller
Canadian politician
Vladimir Hachinski
Canadian neuroscientist
Peter Savaryn
Canadian lawyer
John Hnatyshyn
Canadian senator (1907-1967)
Maria Fischer-Slyzh
Ukrainian Canadian pediatrician and mecenate (1922–2012)
Roman Pelts
Ukrainian chess player
Volodymyr Sikevych
Ukrainian general (1870-1952)
Neil Savaryn
William Andres
Canadian politician (1925–2010)
Basil Ladyka