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Ivan Dzyuba Receives the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Award for 2016

04.10.2016, 17:44
Ivan Dzyuba Receives the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Award for 2016 - фото 1
Mr. Dzyuba was recognized for his decades-long commitment to human rights and fostering dialogue between nations. He was an authoritative voice during the repressive Soviet period, speaking out against xenophobia and anti-Semitism and working for national reconciliation.

Ivan Dzyuba, writer and former dissident received the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Medal for 2016. The award, conferred by the Jewish Confederation of Ukraine and the Ukrainian Jewish Encounter, was presented at a dinner on September 28, 2016 in Kyiv, Ukraine in commemoration of the 75th anniversary of Babyn Yar, Ukrainian-Jewish Encounter informs.

Mr. Dzyuba was recognized for his decades-long commitment to human rights and fostering dialogue between nations. He was an authoritative voice during the repressive Soviet period, speaking out against xenophobia and anti-Semitism and working for national reconciliation.

“The Third Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Medal is conferred upon Ivan Dzyuba, who fifty years ago spoke before a group of brave Jews and Ukrainians courageously gathered at Babyn Yar to remember the 34,000 Jewish victims of the 1941 mass murders, risking persecution of the Soviet state,” James C. Temerty, board chairman of the Ukrainian Jewish Encounter said before conferring the medal on Mr. Dzyuba. “Through his heroism, humanism, and moral clarity, he exemplified the spirit of Metropolitan Andrey.”

In 1966, during an impassioned speech at a non-sanctioned gathering to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Babyn Yar, Dzyuba, then 35, spoke of the dangers of silence—which he called “the accomplice of lies and captivity”—by a Soviet regime that manipulated or ignored the historical truths of the tragic fate of Jewish victims.

In that speech Dzyuba also forthrightly condemned the official and popular anti-Semitism he saw among some of his own people. “As a Ukrainian, I am ashamed that in the midst of my nation—as among other nations—there is anti-Semitism, and there are those shameful, despicable human manifestations that bear the name of anti-Semitism.”

Ivan Dzyuba was born in 1931 in the Donetsk region of Ukraine. He came to prominence during the emergence of a postwar generation of writers who revitalized Ukrainian literature. He was active in the dissident movement of the 1960s against the persecution of the Ukrainian intelligentsia and Internationalism or Russification?, a widely-translated critique of Soviet policies published in the West in 1968 that led to his arrest and enforced professional isolation.

Dzyuba re-emerged as an important public figure after Ukrainian independence and served as Ukraine’s Minister of Culture from 1992 to 1994. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, where he has been a prolific contributor to Ukrainian literary criticism.

Mr. Dzyuba, now 85, is the third winner of the Sheptytsky Award. In 2014 the award was presented to Ukrainian businessman Victor Pinchuk, and a year earlier, it was presented by the Jewish Confederation of Ukraine to James Constantin Temerty, Canadian-Ukrainian businessman, philanthropist, and founder of the Ukrainian Jewish Encounter.

About Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky

Born in 1865 to a prominent aristocratic family, Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky was the spiritual leader of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church from 1901 until his death in 1944. During World War II, he helped save more than the 150 Jewish lives. The Metropolitan sheltered Jews in his own residence at great personal risk, and arranged for Church monasteries to protect well over one hundred Jewish children. Not one of them was betrayed or lost. Metropolitan Sheptytsky also publicly protested against Nazi Germany’s murderous policies towards Jews, alerted Pope Pius XII in personal reports about the mass murders taking place, and issued the pastoral letter Thou Shalt Not Kill in November 1942, urging his parishioners not to participate in Nazi atrocities. The Metropolitan is a model worthy of celebration and emulation, providing a basis for building trust and bridges between communities.