Andrew Roborecki Explained

Andrew Roborecki
Birth Name:Andriy Yakovych Roboretskyi
Birth Date:12 December 1910
Birth Place:Velyki Mosty, Austro-Hungarian Empire (present day Lviv Oblast, Ukraine)
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Eparchial Bishop of Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saskatoon
Appointed:10 March 1951 (as Apostolic Exarch)
3 November 1956 (as Eparchial Bishop)
Ended:24 October 1982
Ordination:18 July 1934 (Priest)
Ordained By:Basil Ladyka
Consecration:27 May 1948 (Bishop)
Consecrated By:Basil Ladyka
Predecessor:New Creation
Successor:Basil Filevich
Other Post:Titular Bishop of Tanais (1948–1956),
Auxiliary Bishop of Apostolic Exarchate of Central Canada (1948–1951)

Bishop Andrew J. Roborecki (Ukrainian: Андрій Роборецький; 12 December 1910 in Velyki Mosty, Austro-Hungarian Empire (present day in Chervonohrad Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine) – 24 October 1982 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada) was a Ukrainian-born Canadian Ukrainian Greek Catholic hierarch. He served as the Titular Bishop of Tanais and Auxiliary Bishop of Apostolic Exarchate of Central Canada from 14 February 1948 until 10 March 1951 and as the first Eparchial Bishop of Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saskatoon from 10 March 1951 until his death on 24 October 1982 (until 3 November 1956 with title of Apostolic Exarch of Saskatoon).

Life

Bishop Roborecki was born in the family of Yakiv and Anastasiya Roboretskyi in Halychyna, but in 1913 with family moved to Canada, where he grew up. After the school education, he subsequently studied philosophy and theology and was ordained as a priest on July 18, 1934.

After that he had a various pastoral assignments and served as parish priest in the parishes of Apostolic Exarchate of Canada.[1]

On February 14, 1948, Fr. Roborecki was nominated by Pope Pius XII and on May 27, 1948 consecrated to the Episcopate as the Titular Bishop of Tanais and Auxiliary Bishop of Apostolic Exarchate of Central Canada. The principal consecrator was Archbishop Basil Ladyka.

Bishop Roborecki died on October 24, 1982, in the age 71, while participated in a one conference in Toronto.

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Блажейовський, Дмитро. Ієрархія Київської Церкви (861—1996). 1996. Каменяр. Львів. 352. Ukrainian.