Volodymyr Yaniv


Volodymyr Yaniv was a community and scouting leader in the 1930s, an activist in the OUN and the Ukrainian Military Organization, editor of numerous student and community publications, a professional psychologist and sociologist, and a Ukrainian poet. He was a professor of Psychology at the Ukrainian Catholic Seminary in , professor of the Ukrainian Free University in Munich and its rector, professor of the Ukrainian Catholic University in Rome, a publicist, poet, member of the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
Yaniv completed his gymnasium studies in Lviv in 1928 and further studied history and psychology at the Lviv University. After incarceration at the Bereza Kartuska Detention Camp he completed his studies in Berlin with a dissertation on "The psychological changes of political prisoners". In 1946 he moved to Munich where took an active part in the life of the Ukrainian Free University. Yaniv wrote numerous works studying the effect of incarceration on the works of notable Ukrainian cultural figures such as Taras Shevchenko, Ivan Franko, Lesia Ukrainka, Vasyl Symonenko, Ihor Kalynets.

Plast

In his youth, in 1927-32, Yaniv took an interest in the Plast Ukrainian scouting movement, in which he held various leadership roles. He returned to scouting in 1946 and continued active in Ukrainian scouting to the end of his life.

Incarceration

Yaniv was first arrested by the Polish police for a period of two years in 1934-35 at the Bereza Kartuska Detention Camp. In 1936 he was once again arrested and given a 5-year term being released in 1938. In July 1941 he was arrested by the Germans and confined in Krakow for membership of the Ukrainian National Committee, established on 21 June 1941. His prison experiences became the basis for his dissertation and many of the books and studies he published in later years.

His Poems

Battle of Kruty
The golden blaze has lighten up,
The world has shuddered from sound of trumpets,
The glory widely could be heard
That has arose for us our country
And Ukraine has stepped out of jails.
The wounds of hundred years has healed
As no more horror was there present
Of tyrants that laid in dew
Our heavy shackles has been torn
And the path into the future has cleared up...
For further reading refer .

Awards