Fallen on Maidan: Bohdan Solchanyk, Lecturer in Modern History at Ukrainian Catholic University

Lviv, Ukraine, Feb 21, 2014 / 04:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Ukrainian Catholic University, located in the far-western city of Lviv, is lamenting the death of one of its lecturers who was killed Feb. 20 during anti-government protests in Kyiv.

Bohdan Solchanyk, who was 29, lectured on modern history at the university and was killed at Independence Square in the Ukrainian capital during protests that have been ongoing since November.

“I really appreciated Bohdan as a creative young lecturer and researcher,” Oleksander Ziatsev, the former chair of Ukrainian Catholic University’s modern history department, told CNA Feb. 20.

“He was a true generator of ideas, had a creative attitude toward his work with students. He initiated a cinema seminar at UCU, where teachers and students discussed Soviet movies from historical and sociological perspectives. I took part in this seminar with great interest.”

Solchanyk was an archivist and sociologist with a special interest in electoral practices in contemporary Ukraine.

A statement on his death, made “with great sadness in our hearts,” was issued by Ukrainian Catholic University, calling Solchanyk “talented at everything, whether it was an amateur theatrical role, or everyday teaching at the university.”

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He earned a masters in sociology at Ivan Franko National University in Lviv, and was a Ph.D. candidate at the Graduate Program for Social Research in Warsaw; he taught such courses as “The Soviet Union as a System” at Ukrainian Catholic University and was well regarded among faculty and students.

Solchanyk had a deep concern for Ukraine’s public life, and was reported to have been active in the country’s Orange Revolution in 2004, when hundreds of thousands of protestors occupied Kyiv’s Independence Square, also called “Maidan,” in response to a contested presidential election.

The Orange Revolution was bloodless, but the current demonstrations saw their bloodiest days this week, with reports of up to 100 dead, both protestors and police forces, since Feb. 18; Ukraine’s Health Ministry, meanwhile, has confirmed 75 dead, according to the Kyiv Post [the count has continued to grow since this publication date to over 100].

“We unequivocally affirm that responsibility for the current escalation rests solely on the government – personally Viktor Yanukovych and his ‘hawkish’ command,” the rectorate of Ukrainian Catholic University declared in a Feb. 19 statement.

“Every case of escalation, each more striking in its complete absurdity, slashes our hopes for a peaceful and wise solution to the crisis and brings us closer to a humanitarian catastrophe.”

“May the merciful Lord fill us all with hope and courage to sacrificially serve Ukraine during these difficult trials!”

Oksana Solchanyk, center, her husband, Zinovij, left, and son Stepan mourned on Saturday in Lviv, Ukraine, over the body of their son and brother, Bohdan, 28. Photo: URIEL SINAI -NYT.

Oksana Solchanyk, center, her husband, Zinovij, left, and son Stepan mourned on Saturday in Lviv, Ukraine, over the body of their son and brother, Bohdan, 28. Photo: URIEL SINAI -NYT.

Source: http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/catholic-campus-in-ukraine-mourns-lecturer-killed-in-protests/

RELATED SOURCES:

NY Times article on his funeral
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/23/world/europe/lviv-in-western-ukraine-mourns-one-of-its-own-killed-in-kiev.html?_r=0

Ukrainian Catholic University notice
http://ucu.edu.ua/eng/news/1882/

Statement of the Ukrainian Catholic University
http://ucu.edu.ua/eng/news/1881/

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