Kule Gift Ensures Continued Growth for Ukrainian Folklore Centre

Peter and Doris Kule, prominent members of the Edmonton Ukrainian community and staunch supporters of the Ukrainian Folklore Centre, made another substantial gift to the University of Alberta on September 6, 2006. 

In honour of their support, the Centre was officially renamed the Peter and Doris Kule Centre for Ukrainian and Canadian Folklore by university president Dr. Indira Samarasekera in a special ceremony.  Also in attendance at the ceremony were Daniel Woolf, Dean of Arts and Andriy Nahachewsky, Centre Director, and numerous invited guests from various university departments and from the Ukrainian community.

The Kules are well known to the Ukrainian Folklore Centre as they provided an endowment in 2004 which created the Kule Chair of Ukrainian Ethnography in the department of Modern Languages and Cultural Studies.  Recognizing the valuable contribution the study of Ukrainian Folklore plays in developing Ukrainian culture and heritage, the Kules decided to assist the further expansion of the Centre.  

“Here Ukrainian studies flourish and we owe this to the vision of the Kules and others like them,” said Dr. Natalie Kononenko, Kule Chair of Ukrainian Ethnography.

The Kules’ gift of two million dollars is being matched by the Faculty of Arts and the Province of Alberta. The Kules’ initiative will allow the Centre to practically double in size.  “This donation is a milestone,” says Centre Director, Andriy Nahachewsky.

Research, scholarships, teaching and publications are all areas in which the new funds will be used. 

A portion of the gift will be used to help support students. Through the newly established Kule Fellowship Fund, the Centre will provide scholarships and assistantships for both graduate and undergraduate students. A Post Doctoral Program will be established allowing young scholars a chance to do research in collaboration with local scholars and the resources of the Bohdan Medwidsky Ukrainian Folklore Archive. 

The Kule Folklore Centre Fund will also allow expansion of the current visiting speakers series which has brought international scholars the University of Alberta.  It will also help fund biannual conferences bringing together some of the best minds for  exploration  and increased sharing between sister institutions in Edmonton, north America and the world.

Currently, the Centre is looking at expanding beyond Ukrainian folklore. The Local Culture and Diversity on the Prairies project, a research effort already completed, focuses on German, English and French, as well as Ukrainian cultural identity in Canada.  Similar new projects are envisioned, as is increased cooperation with other parts of the university.

Expanding beyond Ukrainian folklore will allow the Kule Folklore Centre to fill a void in Western Canada and to fill the need for folklore instruction by increasing the number of courses offered at the university.

The Kule Folklore Centre is extremely grateful to the Kules for their generous contribution to the Centre. Through this gift, the Centre will be able to support the important work they do.

Says Dr. Kononenko: “Folklore is the artistic expression of the common man and woman. Folklore expresses belief in the most satisfying and meaningful way.  It is what uplifts the spirit.  With its spiritual power, it is no wonder that folklore is intimately tied to ethnic identity.  It is that part of our heritage that the common person most wants to preserve.