Honorific-Prefix: | Blessed |
Volodymyr Pryjma | |
Churches: | --> |
Birth Date: | 17 July 1906 |
Birth Place: | , Austrian Galicia, Austria-Hungary |
Death Place: | near Stradch, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
Death Cause: | torture |
Volodymyr Pryjma (uk|Володимир Прийма; 17 July 1906 26 June 1941) was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic choir director and martyr.
Pryjma was born on 17 July 1906 in the village of, Yavoriv District. He graduated from a school for cantors, which was at that time under the care of Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky. He was made the cantor and choir director in the local village church in Stradch. Pryjma was married with two young children. On 26 June 1941, four days after the start of the German-Soviet War, agents of the Soviet Union's NKVD tortured and killed him, along with Mykola Konrad, in a forest near Stradch as they were returning from the house of a sick woman who had requested the sacrament of reconciliation. His body had not been found until a week after the murder. He had been stabbed multiple times in the chest with a bayonet.
He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 27 June 2001.
On 2 November 2019, Pryjma's relics were placed in the Holy Eucharist Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in New Westminster, Canada.[1]
Yurii Sakavronskyi recounted the martyrdom in an interview: