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・ Volodymyr Shandra
・ Volodymyr Sharan
・ Volodymyr Shatskykh
・ Volodymyr Shcherban
・ Volodymyr Shcherbytsky
・ Volodymyr Shekhovtsov
・ Volodymyr Shkidchenko
・ Volodymyr Sichynskyi
・ Volodymyr Sikevych
・ Volodymyr Sinclair
・ Volodymyr Soroka
・ Volodymyr Sosiura
・ Volodymyr Sryzhevskyi
・ Volodymyr Stelmakh
・ Volodymyr Sterlyk
Volodymyr Sterniuk
・ Volodymyr Suprun
・ Volodymyr Sydorenko
・ Volodymyr Synyavskyy
・ Volodymyr Tanchyk
・ Volodymyr Temnytsky
・ Volodymyr Tkachenko
・ Volodymyr Tkachenko (swimmer)
・ Volodymyr Trachuk
・ Volodymyr Troshkin
・ Volodymyr Tsvil
・ Volodymyr Tsybulko
・ Volodymyr Vasylenko
・ Volodymyr Vasylyovych Rybak
・ Volodymyr Veredyuk


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Volodymyr Sterniuk : ウィキペディア英語版
Volodymyr Sterniuk
Volodymyr Sterniuk ((ウクライナ語:Володимир Стернюк); 12 February 1907 – 29 September 1997) was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic archbishop and the acting head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church (UGCC) in Ukraine from 1972-91.
Sterniuk was born in Pustomyty near the city of Lviv in 1907. He was born into the family of a priest.〔''(Bishop Volodymyr Sterniuk )''. Biography from the Institute of Church History at the Ukrainian Catholic University.〕 He studied philosophy and theology both in Ukraine and at the University of Louvain in Belgium.〔Desmond O'Grady. ''The Turned Card: Christianity Before and after the Wall''. Gracewing, 1995. p42〕 He was ordained in 1931 as a Redemptorist priest.〔''(Church Leaders )''. At the website of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.〕
During World War II he served parishes in the Ternopil and Stanislaviv regions.〔Roman Woronowycz. ''(Thousands mourn at funeral of Archbishop Volodymyr Sterniuk )''. The Ukrainian Weekly.〕 He witnessed the liquidation of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church at the "synod of Lviv" by hiding in a loft of St. George's Cathedral.〔〔(Archbishop Volodymyr Sterniuk dead at 90, was a leader of underground Ukrainian Church ). The Ukrainian Weekly. Information provided by the press service of the Patriarchal Curia.〕 He was arrested by the Soviets in 1947 and spent five years in prison and labor camps in Arkhangelsk where he worked as a lumberman.〔 While in the camp, he continued his priestly duties and occasionally managed to celebrate mass with a few crumbs of bread and drops of wine.〔 After his release, he returned to his hometown where he worked various jobs including park gatekeeper, bookkeeper, janitor and nurse while secretly continuing his priestly ministry. He taught catechism, said mass, and heard confessions in his spare time in his room or in the woods.〔
In July 1964 Sterniuk was secretly ordained bishop by Vasyl Velychkovsky and from 1972 to 1991 was the leader the UGCC in Ukraine until Myroslav Lubachivsky returned from exile in 1991.〔〔Paul Burns. ''Bulter's Lives of the Saints''. Burns and Oates, 2005. p 81〕 From 1964-90, he lived in a single room above a paint shop. During this time, he was subject to constant surveillance and frequent raids by the Soviet police who confiscated his books, rosary, and chalice. During this time he wrote liturgical and theology texts, and ordained five to six priests a year.〔〔
In 1983, he became archbishop and the representative in Lviv for Myroslav Lubachivsky, the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church who was at the time residing in Rome.〔 On August 19, 1990 he celebrated the first divine liturgy offered by a Greek-Catholic priest in the St. George's Cathedral since the Soviet liquidation of the Church.〔 When he died of natural causes on 29 September 1997 a public funeral procession which attracted tens of thousands was conducted through the center of Lviv.〔〔
==References==



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