July 29, 2016

Orest Subtelny, noted historian and political scientist, 75

More

Prof. Orest Subtelny in a photo from his teaching days.

TORONTO – Orest Subtelny, a noted historian and political scientist, a university professor, scholar and author, passed away peacefully on July 24, after succumbing to cancer and dementia. He was 75.

Born in Krakow, occupied Poland, on May 17, 1941, he came to the United States with his parents as a refugee in 1949. In his new hometown of Philadelphia he attended the renowned Central High School and was active in Plast Ukrainian Scouting Organization, where he made many lifelong friendships, especially in his fraternity, Burlaky.

After graduating from Temple University with a B.A. in 1965 and from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill with an M.A. in 1967, he completed his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1973 in history and Middle Eastern studies. His thesis, titled “Unwilling Allies: The Relations of Hetman Pylyp Orlyk with the Ottoman Porte and the Crimean Khanate,” was the first doctorate in the newly formed Ukrainian Studies Program at Harvard.

While at Harvard he met his wife, Maria, and after several memorable years as assistant and then associate professor at Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y., in 1982 he moved to York University in Toronto, where he was professor of history and political science until his retirement in 2015.

An avid soccer fan, he played for the All-American Team in college and later with the Norwood Kickers in Boston.

During his academic career he authored six books on East European and Ukrainian history, including “The Mazepists: Ukrainian Separatism in the 18th Century” and “Domination of Eastern Europe: Native Nobilities and Foreign Absolutism,” and a total of 55 articles and book chapters. During the last years of his career he was working on a history of the Plast scouting movement. He was editor of the journal Nationalities Papers and an organizer of many international scholarly conferences.

From 1998 to 2012 he was a director of Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) projects in Ukraine.

His most important scholarly contribution was his book, “Ukraine: A History,” which was published by the University of Toronto Press in 1988, shortly before Ukraine’s independence. The book gave the country an authoritative history during its formative years. It has been published in four editions and translated into numerous languages. It will remain his lasting legacy to Ukraine and Ukrainians.

For his scholarly and professional contributions, he was presented with the Order of Merit by the government of Ukraine in 2001. He was named a foreign member of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences and awarded an honorary doctorate by the Diplomatic Academy of Ukraine. He was also awarded the Shevchenko Medal by the Ukrainian Canadian Congress for his outstanding contributions to the development of the Ukrainian Canadian community in the category of education.

He is survived by his wife, Prof. Maria Subtelny; son, Dr. Alexander Subtelny of Cambridge, Mass.; sister, Dr. Oksana Isajiw, with her husband, Irenaeus, of Newton, N.J.; and by many other family members in Canada, the U.S. and Ukraine.

The funeral liturgy was offered on July 29 at St. Demetrius Ukrainian Catholic Church, followed by interment at Park Lawn Cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made to Plast Ukrainian Scouting Organization (https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/plast-ukrainian-youth-association-of-canada1978-associatio/), the Ukrainian Canadian Care Center (http://stdemetrius.ca/donate/index.php) or the Hurvitz Brain Sciences Center at Sunnybrook Hospital (http://sunnybrook.ca/foundation/brain/).

Source: Turner & Porter Funeral Directors, Toronto.

Comments are closed.