
Saint profile
Bl. Vasyl Velychkovsky
1903–1973
Associated with Priests; patronage includes Patron of persecuted Christians.
Biography and devotion
Bl. Vasyl Velychkovsky: life, patronage, and devotion
Blessed Vasyl Velychkovsky was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic Redemptorist bishop and martyr of the Soviet persecution. He was born on 1 June 1903 in Stanislaviv, now Ivano-Frankivsk in Ukraine, into a devout priestly family. He entered the Redemptorists and was ordained a priest in 1925. His early ministry included preaching missions, parish work and care for the poor, especially in regions where the Ukrainian Catholic Church faced political pressure.
After the Second World War, the Soviet regime moved violently against the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, forcing it underground and trying to absorb it into the Russian Orthodox Church under state control. Vasyl refused to abandon communion with Rome. In 1945 he was arrested and eventually sentenced to death, a sentence later commuted to labor camp imprisonment. He endured years in Soviet camps and prisons.
Released in 1955, he returned to underground ministry. In 1963 he was secretly consecrated bishop in a Moscow hotel room by Metropolitan Josyf Slipyj. As bishop, he ordained priests, celebrated the sacraments and strengthened Catholics who had to live their faith in secrecy. Arrested again in 1969, he was subjected to severe imprisonment and torture. The regime released him in 1972 and expelled him from the Soviet Union, but the damage to his body was lasting.
He settled in Winnipeg, Canada, where many Ukrainian Catholics lived, and died on 30 June 1973 from the effects of his sufferings. Pope St. John Paul II beatified him as a martyr in 2001. When his body was exhumed years later, it was found to be almost incorrupt, and his shrine in Winnipeg became a place of prayer and devotion. Blessed Vasyl’s life is a modern witness to episcopal courage: a bishop who kept the sacraments alive when the Church was driven underground and whose wounded body became a sign of fidelity after death.
Because he was a bishop of the underground Church, much of his ministry had to be hidden: secret ordinations, whispered confessions, guarded liturgies, and pastoral letters passed under danger. The survival of Ukrainian Greek Catholic life under Soviet suppression depended on such men. His body’s preservation after death deepened devotion, but the core miracle of the life was fidelity under a regime designed to erase his Church.
At a glance
- Life dates
- 1903–1973
- Feast day
- June 27
- Patronage
- Patron of persecuted Christians
- Incorrupt status
- His body was found almost incorrupt after exhumation and is enshrined in Winnipeg.
Relic in the Chasing Saints collection
A relic of Bl. Vasyl Velychkovsky is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.
Reported favors

