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Blessed
Vasyl Velychkovskyi
(1903-1973)
Vasyl
Vsevolod Velychkovskyi was born on 1 June 1903
in Stanislaviv (now Ivano-Frankivsk) to a family
of the Velychkovskyi's and Teodorovych's, both
of which had had a long tradition of priests in
their families. Vasyl's parents, Volodymyr and
Anna, brought up their children in a spirit of
Christian devotion. That is why Vasyl had a desire
to work for the salvation of souls since his very
childhood.
Vasyl Velychkovskyi received his gymnasium education
in the town of Horodentsi. Being an ardent patriot,
the fifteen-years-old gymnasium student joined
the Ukrainian Galician Army to fight for the independence
of his motherland during World War I. After his
safe return from the army in 1920, Vasyl Velychkovskyi
entered the Lviv seminary. In 1924, he was ordained
a deacon by Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytskyi. It
was at that time that Velychkovskyi discovered
his monastic vocation. With assistance from his
aunt Monica, he joined the Redemptorist novitiate
and a year later, on 29 August 1925, he professed
the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Since
Velychkovskyi had already completed his theological
studies, he was ordained a priest by Bishop Y.
Botsian immediately after completing the novitiate,
on the 9th of October of the same year.
From the very beginning of Fr. Velychkovskyi's
monastic life, his superiors noticed his talent
as a missionary. In order to develop this talent,
after Fr. Velychkovskyi spent two years teaching
at the Redemptorist gymnasium "Juvenate". He was
also sent to Stanislaviv to conduct missions together
with his more experienced confreres. This was
the beginning of Fr. Velychkovskyi's apostolic
work, which lasted for 20 years - until the beginning
of the persecution of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic
Church.
On 16 November 1928 Fr. Velychkovskyi arrived
at the Redemptorist monastery in Kovel. There,
he immediately became involved in missionary work
among the Galician settlers, scattered throughout
the Volhyn, Pidliashshia, Kholm and Polissia regions,
who had departed from the Greek-Catholic Church
and joined the Russian Orthodox Church. Along
with this work among the Galician settlers, Fr.
Velychkovskyi also organized missions for the
local population of Volhyn, Polissia, and Belarus.
Using financial support from Motropolitan Sheptytskyi
and other sponsors, he founded several churches
and chapels. In 1935 Fr. Velychkovskyi returned
to the Stanislaviv monastery and became superior
there.
Fr. Velychkovskyi continued his apostolic activity
on a large scale, even though the Greek Catholic
Church underwent persecution at the hands of the
Soviets after their occupation of Western Ukraine
in 1939. In 1940 he organized a procession in
which some 20 thousand faithful participated carrying
crosses through the streets of Stanislaviv,. Despite
the threats from Soviet secret police, Fr. Velychkovskyi
did not give up. In 1941, on Metropolitan Sheptytskyi's
request, he departed for Central Ukraine to work
with the Orthodox Ukrainians of Kamianets-Podilskyi.
However, the pro-Ukrainian activities of the new
priest caused suspicion among the Germans who
had recently occupied the town. Just three days
after his arrival, Fr. Velychkovskyi was accused
of cooperating with Ukrainian national resistance
organizations and was ordered to leave the town
in twenty-four hours. He moved to Ternopil and
became a superior of the Dormition church monastery
in that town.
Having seized Galicia for the second time in 1945,
the Soviet regime in just one night of 10-11 April
arrested representatives of the entire Greek-Catholic
hierarchy. On 26 July 1945 Fr. Vasyl Velychkovskyi
was arrested in Ternopil - "for anti-Soviet propaganda".
During the interrogation he was offered the option
of joining the Russian Orthodox Church in exchange
for his freedom. The answer was: "Never!" Later
Fr. Velychkovskyi was transferred to Kiev prison,
where the investigation of his case lasted for
almost two years. Finally, the Kiev regional court
sentenced him to death - for two anticommunist
phrases ("red horde" and "red gang") which occurred
in a pocket calendar issued by Fr. Velychkovskyi
in Stanislaviv in 1939.
During the three months spent in a death row cell,
Fr. Velychkovskyi continued performing his duties
of a priest. He taught prisoners to pray; he instructed
them on the truths of Christian faith, and prepared
them for receiving the Holy Sacraments. He led
them to the doors of heaven. Finally, the night
came when the guards led Fr. Velychkovskyi out
of his cell. However, they did not go downstairs,
to the place of execution, but upstairs, to the
office of the prison administration. There, Fr.
Velychkovskyi was informed that his death sentence
was changed to a ten-year prison term.
In the first two years of his term Fr. Velychkovskyi
was in a prison camp in the Kirovsk region; later,
he was transferred to the Vorkuta mines. Despite
the exhausting work, Fr. Velychkovkyi celebrated
the Liturgy almost every day - using tins for
liturgical accessories. "That tin" - says Metropolitan
Hermaniuk - "was his chalice, his dyscos, his
altar, his church … and nothing was able to destroy
his church, for it was [based on his] strong conviction
and God's grace". Several months before his release,
Fr. Velychkovskyi's fellow prisoner friends managed
to arrange for him to work in the prison hospital
rather than in the mines. This change saved his
life - for his health had been ruined by ten years
of imprisonment and exhausting labour. On 9 July
1955 Fr. Velychkovskyi was released.
After his return to Lviv Fr. Velychkovskyi did
not find any church or chapel where he could serve,
but this did not discourage him. He occupied a
small room in number 11 Vozzyednannia Street.
Here, he built an altar out of empty cardboard
boxes. The faithful visited Fr. Velychkovskyi
in groups of five or six to participate in Liturgies.
During the period of the Greek-Catholic Church's
underground existence he was not afraid to celebrate
daily Liturgy, to conduct spiritual exercises,
and to provide spiritual leadership for many devoted
Christians. In 1959 the Apostolic See appointed
Fr. Vasyl Velychkovskyi a bishop of the "Silent
Church"; because of a complicated situation in
the Soviet Union, his Episcopal ordination became
possible only four years later.
The ten-year-long imprisonment did not "correct"
or change Bishop Velychkovskyi. He continued "spreading
anticommunist propaganda among the people, did
not participate in socially-useful work, did not
perform the duties of a Soviet citizen; he wrote
a book about the icon of Our Lady of Perpetual
Help, wherein attempts were made to prove through
specific examples that atheists cannot be good
citizens; he listened to Vatican radio broadcasts".
This list was sufficient to justify a new arrest
of Bishop Vasyl Velychkovskyi on 2 January 1969.
This time the imprisonment lasted for three years;
the term was served in Kommunarsk near Donbass
and was the cause of a severe heart disease for
Bishop Velychkovskyi.
On 27 January 1972 the second term of imprisonment
was over. This time bishop Velychkovskyi was not
allowed to return to Lviv; instead, he was sent
to Yugoslavia for "recreation". He used this opportunity
to visit his sister in Zagreb and then Bishop
Velychkovskyi departed for Rome, where he met
Patriarch Yosyf Slipyi. He also had a private
conversation with Pope Paul VI. Shortly afterwards,
following the invitation of Metropolitam Maksym
Hermaniuk, Bishop Velychkovskyi visited Canada.
Unfortunately, his visit of the Ukrainian diaspora
in Canada did not last for long. On 30 June 1973
Bishop Velychkovskyi died at the age of 70 having
served as a bishop for 10 years. Although his
heart became silent in his body, it continues
to sound in our souls: "Fear none of those things
which thou shall suffer: behold, the devil shall
cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried;
and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou
faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown
of life" (Rev 2,10).
Taking into account the testimonies of Bishop
Vasyl Velychkovskyi's virtuous life, and particularly
his endurance, courage and faithfulness to Christ's
Church during the period of persecution, the beatification
process was started on the occasion of the Jubilee
Year. On 2 March 2001 the process was completed
on the level of eparchy, and the case was handed
over to the Apostolic See. On 6 April 2001 the
theological committee recognized the fact of bishop
Velychkovskyi's martyrdom. On 23 April his martyrdom
was verified by the Assembly of Cardinals, and
on 24 April 2001 Most Holy Father John Paul II
signed a decree of beatification of Bishop Vasyl
Velychkovskyi, a blessed martyr of our Christian
faith.
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