
Today we will play a game with the alphabet. “A” is for aristocrat, someone who is privileged but also someone who can be considered the best of its kind. “A” is also for ascetic, someone who practices profound self-discipline and abstains from the worldly pleasures of life. “A” is also for Andrei, as in Andrei Sheptytsky, a legendary Ukrainian religious leader and moral authority in the very much-tormented Galicia of the 20th century. A remarkable children’s book—and a book that will delight not only children—created a stir at this year’s Lviv Book Forum. Sheptytsky from A to Zed, or if you prefer, from A to Zee, offers a delightful yet thoughtful account of a renowned figure’s life through the letters of the alphabet. Of course, in the original Ukrainian the last letter is not zed, but rather “ya,” which means “I.” I, and you, and anyone else reading the book will get an invaluable tip when we reach this letter. But more about that later. The book, written by Halyna Tereshchuk and Oksana Dumanska, and illustrated by Romana Romanyshyn and Andrii Lesiv, covers with wit and panache all the highlights of a great man’s life. Count Roman Aleksander Maria Sheptytsky […]