Omelyan Kovch

Blessed

Omelyan Hryhorovych Kovch
Martyr
BornAugust 20, 1884
DiedMarch 25, 1944
Majdanek Concentration Camp
BeatifiedJune 27, 2001, Lviv, Ukraine by Pope John Paul II

Оmelyan Hryhorovych Kovch (Ukrainian: Омелян Григорович Ковч; August 20, 1884, Kosmach — March 25, 1944) was a Ukrainian Greek-Catholic priest murdered in Majdanek concentration camp.

He was born in a peasant family in the town of Tlumach in the Kosiv region of Western Ukraine, and was ordained in 1911 by Hryhorij Chomyszyn after graduating from the Sts. Sergius and Bacchus College in Rome.[1] In 1919, he was a field chaplain for the Ukrainian Galician Army.[2] He served as a parish priest from 1921 to 1943 at the church of St. Nicholas in the village of Peremyshliany. Prior to his imprisonment, Fr. Kovch conducted his priestly ministry in Przemysl, while attending to his parishioners' social and cultural life.[2] He fathered six children, and devoted himself to helping the poor and orphans.[2]

In the spring of 1943 he was arrested by the Gestapo for harboring Jews, specifically for providing Jews with more than 600 baptismal certificates (alternative date from another source: He was arrested by the Gestapo on December 20, 1942[2]). On March 25, 1944 he died in the infirmary of Majdanek concentration camp near Lublin, Poland.

On September 9, 1999, the Jewish Council of Ukraine awarded him the title of "Ukraine's righteous."[citation needed]

His beatification took place on June 27, 2001 in Lviv, during the Byzantine rite liturgy conducted by Pope John Paul II.

  1. ^ Gudziak, Boris ( August 26, 2012). The witness of the Ukrainian Catholic priest-martyr of Majdanek, Omelian Kovch, The Ukrainian Weekly 35, 8
  2. ^ a b c d Church of the Martyrs: The New Saints of Ukraine. Lviv, Ukraine: St John's Monastery. 2002. p. 16. ISBN 966-561-345-6.