St. Clement of Ohrid (Macedonian: Св. Климент Охридски) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is the first Macedonian Orthodox Church in Canada and one of the oldest in the Macedonian Orthodox Diocese of America and Canada.
St. Clement of Ohrid | |
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43°42′31″N 79°20′28″W / 43.70857°N 79.34108°W | |
Location | 76 Overlea Boulevard Toronto, Ontario M4H 1C5 |
Denomination | Macedonian Orthodox Church |
Website | www |
History | |
Founded | 1965 |
Administration | |
Diocese | America and Canada |
Clergy | |
Priest(s) | Rev. Sasho Celeski, Very Rev. Aleksandar Todorovski |
The church not only tends to the spiritual needs of Toronto's Macedonian community, but it serves as the home to several prominent educational, cultural, and charitable organizations that actively preserve and promote Macedonian ethnic and cultural awareness. In addition to church services, St. Clement of Ohrid also has three banquet halls, a board room, a number of private offices and classrooms.[1]
History
editToronto is the home to the largest concentration of Macedonian Canadians outside of the Balkans,[2] with 43,110 Canadians who claimed full, or partial Macedonian ancestry in the 2016 Canadian census. Long before the Macedonian Orthodox Church was declared autonomous, early immigrants from Macedonia founded churches that were under the jurisdiction of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church and the Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada and Australia.[3] They are Sts. Cyril & Methody Macedono-Bulgarian Orthodox Church founded in 1910, St. George Macedono-Bulgarian Orthodox Church founded in 1941 and Holy Trinity Macedono-Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Church founded in 1973. After the Macedonian Orthodox Church declared autonomy in 1958, many members felt the need to establish a new parish under its jurisdiction.
On 7 August 1962, members of the United Macedonians Organization held a meeting in the King Edward Hotel in Toronto and the decision was made to build a new church in the Thorncliffe Park neighbourhood which will bear the name of the medieval Saint Clement of Ohrid. After this decision was brought forth, an assembly was also formed and a church delegation was sent by the Holy Synod in Skopje, SR Macedonia. The first holy liturgy of the parish was carried out on 12 August 1962 in the "Zhelevo Hall", a community centre established by Aegean Macedonians from the village of Želevo (Antartiko). On 12 December 1962, the church received its license from the city of Toronto to officially operate religious services. On 5 April 1964, the foundations of the church were laid by the church's first priest, Rev. Kiril Stojanovski. The event was also attended by Dositheus II, Archbishop of Ohrid and Macedonia. On 18 April 1965, on the Orthodox holiday of Palm Sunday, the church was officially opened for service.[4]
The inside of the church features murals by Macedonian Canadian artist Georgi Danevski.[5]
In February 2009, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary celebration of the United Macedonians Organization, the church was visited by the Prime Minister of Canada, Stephen Harper.[6] In August 2009, on the occasion of the Orthodox holiday of the Domition of the Virgin Mary, the church was visited by Nikola Gruevski – the Prime Minister of Macedonia.[7]
See also
editExternal links
editFootnotes
edit- ^ "St. Clement of Ohrid Cathedral". Retrieved 14 September 2014.
- ^ Gregory Michaelidis, "Salvation Abroad: Macedonian Migration to North America and the Making of Modern Macedonia, 1870–1970" (PhD diss., University of Maryland, College Park, 2005),15.
- ^ Lillian Petroff, Sojourners and Settlers: The Macedonian Community in Toronto to 1940 (Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario, 1995)
- ^ "Official Website of the American-Canadian Macedonian Orthodox Diocese". Archived from the original on 6 August 2014. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
- ^ Georgi Danevski website
- ^ TJ-Hosting (15 February 2009). "MHRMI". Retrieved 14 September 2014.
- ^ "Official State Visit to Canada by the Prime Minister of Macedonia Nikola Gruevski" (Press release). Toronto, Canada: Macedonian Human Rights Movement International (MHRMI). 25 August 2009.