CIUS
Director Honoured by Kharkiv
University
By
Volodymyr Kravchenko
At a meeting of the Academic Council of
the Vasyl
Karazyn
Kharkiv
National
University
on May 26, the director of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (CIUS),
Dr. Zenon E. Kohut, was awarded an honorary doctorate. The award was a tribute
to Dr. Kohut’s extensive scholarly work in the field of Ukrainian history,
especially the study of Ukrainian-Russian relations in the early modern period,
as well as his achievements in the organization of Ukrainian studies and the
development of contemporary scholarship in that field in the West and in
Ukraine, notably at Kharkiv University.
In 1999, Dr. Kohut
initiated the establishment of the Kowalsky Program for the Study of Eastern
Ukraine, whose purpose is to develop Ukrainian studies on an up-to-date
methodological basis. Kharkiv
University
was chosen as the program’s base of operations, and its coordination was
entrusted to Professor Volodymyr Kravchenko, who holds the university’s Chair
of Ukrainian Studies. As a result of these initial steps, the Kowalsky Eastern
Institute of Ukrainian Studies was founded at Kharkiv
University
in 2000.
The institute proceeded
to develop and carry out a number of research and organizational projects.
These include the establishment of a branch in Zaporizhia headed by Professor
Anatolii Boiko; the publication of a scholarly journal titled Skhid-Zakhid (East-West),
now considered one of the best scholarly publications in Ukraine; the
arrangement of an annual Kowalsky student research paper competition; and the
organization of annual international conferences, symposia and seminars.
The awarding of an
honourary doctorate to Dr. Kohut by Kharkiv
University
may be seen as an indication of the success of the Kowalsky Program, its
utility and benefit to the university and the region, and its good prospects of
development. That is how Dr. Kohut characterized the occasion in his thank-you
speech.
The list of well-known
historians and honourary members of Kharkiv
University
includes the names of August Ludwig Schlzer, Nikolai Karamzin, and Johann
Christian Engel. Mykhailo Hrushevsky, Ivan Franko, and Oleksandra Yefymenko
were awarded honourary doctorates in their day.