Difference between revisions of "Dyck, Harvey L. (1934-2025)"

From GAMEO
Jump to navigation Jump to search
[checked revision][checked revision]
(Created page with "__FORCETOC__ __TOC__ 300px|thumb|right''|Harvey L. Dyck<br>Photo: Courtesy of Leonard G. Friesen.'' Harvey Leonard Dyck: historian, academic mentor,...")
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__FORCETOC__
 
__FORCETOC__
 
__TOC__
 
__TOC__
[[File:Unnamed (1).jpg|300px|thumb|right''|Harvey L. Dyck<br>Photo: Courtesy of Leonard G. Friesen.'']]
+
[[File:Unnamed (1).jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Harvey L. Dyck<br>Photo: Courtesy of Leonard G. Friesen''.]]
Harvey Leonard Dyck:  historian, academic mentor, and a voice for Soviet Mennonite victims, born on 16 March 1934 to Isaac John Dyck (1896-1975) and Anna Warkentin Dyck (1899-1985).  On 6 July 1957 he married Anna (Anne) Justina Konrad.  They had three children: Maria, Elizabeth and Alexander.  Dyck died of heart failure in Toronto on 11 January 2025.   
+
Harvey Leonard Dyck:  historian, academic mentor, and a voice for Soviet Mennonite victims, born on 16 March 1934 to [[Dyck, Isaak J. (1896-1975)|Isaak John Dyck (1896-1975)]] and Anna Warkentin Dyck (1899-1985).  On 6 July 1957 he married Anna (Anne) Justina Konrad.  They had three children: Maria, Elizabeth and Alexander.  Dyck died of heart failure in Toronto on 11 January 2025.   
  
Dyck was born in Winnipeg to parents who had emigrated from the Soviet Union to Canada in the 1920s. His father taught mathematics and science in Winkler, Manitoba. In 1944 the family moved to Abbotsford, British Columbia where Harvey’s father became high school principal of Mennonite Educational Institute.  
+
Dyck was born in Winnipeg to parents who had emigrated from the [[Soviet Union]] to [[Canada]] in the 1920s. His father taught mathematics and science in [[Winkler (Manitoba, Canada)|Winkler]], [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]]. In 1944 the family moved to [[Abbotsford (British Columbia, Canada)|Abbotsford]], [[British Columbia (Canada)|British Columbia]] where Harvey’s father became high school principal of [[Mennonite Educational Institute (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada)|Mennonite Educational Institute]].  
  
 
Dyck received his PhD from Columbia University, New York City. He taught at Wesleyan and Columbia Universities before he became Professor of Russian and East European history at the University of Toronto (UT), a position he held from 1966 to 1997.  From 1989 until his death, Dyck was Director of a Research Programme at the Centre for Russian and East European Studies at UT.   
 
Dyck received his PhD from Columbia University, New York City. He taught at Wesleyan and Columbia Universities before he became Professor of Russian and East European history at the University of Toronto (UT), a position he held from 1966 to 1997.  From 1989 until his death, Dyck was Director of a Research Programme at the Centre for Russian and East European Studies at UT.   
  
Dyck was an active member of Toronto United Mennonite Church where he chaired a committee that sponsored and settled over 50 Vietnamese refugee families.
+
Dyck was an active member of [[Toronto United Mennonite Church (Toronto, Ontario, Canada)|Toronto United Mennonite Church]] where he chaired a committee that sponsored and settled over 50 Vietnamese refugee families.
  
Dyck initially researched the foreign policy of the Hapsburg Empire in the late 18th century as well as relations between Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union in the 1920s.  As a senior scholar, Dyck’s attention shifted to the investigation and popularization of the Mennonite experience in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union.  
+
Dyck initially researched the foreign policy of the [[Hapsburg, House of|Hapsburg Empire]] in the late 18th century as well as relations between Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union in the 1920s.  As a senior scholar, Dyck’s attention shifted to the investigation and popularization of the Mennonite experience in Imperial [[Russia]] and the Soviet Union.  
  
In 1991, with the fall of Communism, Dyck gained access to several state archives in post-Soviet Ukraine and began a multi-year microfilming program, collecting as many documents as possible given fears that governments might again restrict access. He oversaw getting copies of these documents back to Canada and shared them globally where they informed historical study of Mennonites.  Dyck spearheaded a multi-volume source collection on Johann Cornies from these materials.
+
In 1991, with the fall of Communism, Dyck gained access to several state archives in post-Soviet Ukraine and began a multi-year microfilming program, collecting as many documents as possible given fears that governments might again restrict access. He oversaw getting copies of these documents back to Canada and shared them globally where they informed historical study of Mennonites.  Dyck spearheaded a multi-volume source collection on [[Cornies, Johann (1789-1848)|Johann Cornies]] from these materials.
  
In retirement, Dyck honoured the lives of Mennonites who disappeared under Stalin.  Collaborating with local Ukrainian scholars, civic administrators and museum officials, he co-organized two international conferences held in Zaporozhe (Zaporizhzhia), Ukraine (“Khortitsa 99” and “Molochna 2004”). He formed a committee to create scholarships at the Universities of Dnepropetrovsk (Dnipro) and Zaporozhe, Ukraine to support research and publication. Dyck became instrumental in a renaissance of Imperial Russian Mennonite studies, most especially in Ukraine where he mentored emerging scholars of Mennonite history at Dnepropetrovsk State University as well as his own doctoral students at UT.
+
In retirement, Dyck honoured the lives of Mennonites who disappeared under Stalin.  Collaborating with local Ukrainian scholars, civic administrators and museum officials, he co-organized two international conferences held in Zaporozhe (Zaporizhzhia), [[Ukraine]] (“Khortitsa 99” and “Molochna 2004”). He formed a committee to create scholarships at the Universities of Dnepropetrovsk (Dnipro) and Zaporozhe, Ukraine to support research and publication. Dyck became instrumental in a renaissance of Imperial Russian Mennonite studies, most especially in Ukraine where he mentored emerging scholars of Mennonite history at Dnepropetrovsk State University as well as his own doctoral students at UT.
  
Dyck fundraised to place monuments in former Mennonite settlements in Ukraine. A particularly important monument in the former village of Chortitza (Zaporozhe) acknowledged the thousands of Mennonites who perished under Stalin.  Other monuments in the former Mennonite homeland in Ukraine, created in collaboration with designer Paul Epp, included those fashioned after a simple bench at a railroad station in Lichtenau and one shaped as a threshing stone which carries the names of all Molotschna villages.  One monument in the former Mennonite village of Eichenfeld (Dubovka) memorialized the massacre there by the forces of Nestor Makhno in 1919.   
+
Dyck fundraised to place monuments in former Mennonite settlements in Ukraine. A particularly important monument in the former village of [[Chortitza (Chortitza Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Chortitza]] (Zaporozhe) acknowledged the thousands of Mennonites who perished under Stalin.  Other monuments in the former Mennonite homeland in Ukraine, created in collaboration with designer Paul Epp, included those fashioned after a simple bench at a railroad station in [[Lichtenau]] and one shaped as a threshing stone which carries the names of all Molotschna villages.  One monument in the former Mennonite village of [[Eichenfeld (Yazykovo Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Eichenfeld]] (Dubovka) memorialized the massacre there by the forces of [[Makhno, Nestor (1888-1934)|Nestor Makhno]] in 1919.   
  
Beyond memorialization, Dyck played a pivotal role in the creation of the Friends of the Mennonite Centre in Molochansk (Halbstadt), Ukraine, a community centre that provided medical, educational and humanitarian aid to those in need.  
+
Beyond memorialization, Dyck played a pivotal role in the creation of the Friends of the Mennonite Centre in Molochansk ([[Halbstadt (Molotschna Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Halbstadt]]), Ukraine, a community centre that provided medical, educational and humanitarian aid to those in need.  
  
 
= Books authored by Harvey L. Dyck =
 
= Books authored by Harvey L. Dyck =
Line 49: Line 49:
  
 
[[Category:Persons]]
 
[[Category:Persons]]
 +
[[Category:Writers]]
 +
[[Category:Editors]]
 +
[[Category:College/University Faculty and Staff]]

Latest revision as of 00:30, 11 July 2025

Harvey L. Dyck
Photo: Courtesy of Leonard G. Friesen
.

Harvey Leonard Dyck: historian, academic mentor, and a voice for Soviet Mennonite victims, born on 16 March 1934 to Isaak John Dyck (1896-1975) and Anna Warkentin Dyck (1899-1985). On 6 July 1957 he married Anna (Anne) Justina Konrad. They had three children: Maria, Elizabeth and Alexander. Dyck died of heart failure in Toronto on 11 January 2025.

Dyck was born in Winnipeg to parents who had emigrated from the Soviet Union to Canada in the 1920s. His father taught mathematics and science in Winkler, Manitoba. In 1944 the family moved to Abbotsford, British Columbia where Harvey’s father became high school principal of Mennonite Educational Institute.

Dyck received his PhD from Columbia University, New York City. He taught at Wesleyan and Columbia Universities before he became Professor of Russian and East European history at the University of Toronto (UT), a position he held from 1966 to 1997. From 1989 until his death, Dyck was Director of a Research Programme at the Centre for Russian and East European Studies at UT.

Dyck was an active member of Toronto United Mennonite Church where he chaired a committee that sponsored and settled over 50 Vietnamese refugee families.

Dyck initially researched the foreign policy of the Hapsburg Empire in the late 18th century as well as relations between Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union in the 1920s. As a senior scholar, Dyck’s attention shifted to the investigation and popularization of the Mennonite experience in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union.

In 1991, with the fall of Communism, Dyck gained access to several state archives in post-Soviet Ukraine and began a multi-year microfilming program, collecting as many documents as possible given fears that governments might again restrict access. He oversaw getting copies of these documents back to Canada and shared them globally where they informed historical study of Mennonites. Dyck spearheaded a multi-volume source collection on Johann Cornies from these materials.

In retirement, Dyck honoured the lives of Mennonites who disappeared under Stalin. Collaborating with local Ukrainian scholars, civic administrators and museum officials, he co-organized two international conferences held in Zaporozhe (Zaporizhzhia), Ukraine (“Khortitsa 99” and “Molochna 2004”). He formed a committee to create scholarships at the Universities of Dnepropetrovsk (Dnipro) and Zaporozhe, Ukraine to support research and publication. Dyck became instrumental in a renaissance of Imperial Russian Mennonite studies, most especially in Ukraine where he mentored emerging scholars of Mennonite history at Dnepropetrovsk State University as well as his own doctoral students at UT.

Dyck fundraised to place monuments in former Mennonite settlements in Ukraine. A particularly important monument in the former village of Chortitza (Zaporozhe) acknowledged the thousands of Mennonites who perished under Stalin. Other monuments in the former Mennonite homeland in Ukraine, created in collaboration with designer Paul Epp, included those fashioned after a simple bench at a railroad station in Lichtenau and one shaped as a threshing stone which carries the names of all Molotschna villages. One monument in the former Mennonite village of Eichenfeld (Dubovka) memorialized the massacre there by the forces of Nestor Makhno in 1919.

Beyond memorialization, Dyck played a pivotal role in the creation of the Friends of the Mennonite Centre in Molochansk (Halbstadt), Ukraine, a community centre that provided medical, educational and humanitarian aid to those in need.

Books authored by Harvey L. Dyck

Weimar Germany and Soviet Russia: A Study in Diplomatic Instability. London: Chatto & Windus, 1966.

The Peter J. Braun Russian Mennonite Archive. Co-authored with Ingrid I. Epp. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996.

Nestor Makhno and the Eichenfeld Massacre: A Civil War Tragedy in a Ukrainian Mennonite Village. Co-authored with John R. Staples and John B. Toews. Kitchener: Pandora Press, 2004.

Books edited by Harvey L. Dyck

Empire and Nations. Essays in Honour of Frederic H. Soward. With H. Peter Krosby. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1969

The Pacifist Impulse in Historical Perspective. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996.

A Mennonite in Russia. The Diaries of Jacob D. Epp, 1851-1880. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013.

Neufeld, Jacob A. Path of Thorns: Soviet Mennonite Life Under Communist and Nazi Rule. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014.

Transformation of the Southern Ukrainian Steppe. Letters and Papers of Johann Cornies. With John R. Staples and Ingrid I. Epp. 3 volumes. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015, 2020, and 2025.

Bibliography

Dyck, Harvey L., “Odyssey to Odessa : Fresh Sources and Perspectives in Russian Mennonite Studies”, Mennonite Quarterly Review, 65 (1991): 437-448.

Friesen, Leonard G. “Appendix: Dnipropetrovsk State University, Khortitsa ’99 and the Renaissance of Public (Mennonite) History in Ukraine,” in Minority Report: Mennonite Identities in Imperial Russia and Soviet Ukraine Reconsidered, 1789-1945. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2018.

Todd, David. “A People’s Past: As the Soviet Union vanished, Harvey Dyck went briskly about the business of preserving,” in University of Toronto Magazine, Spring 1994: 18-23.


Author(s) Leonard G Friesen
Date Published June 2025

Cite This Article

MLA style

Friesen, Leonard G. "Dyck, Harvey L. (1934-2025)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. June 2025. Web. 19 Jan 2026. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Dyck,_Harvey_L._(1934-2025)&oldid=180952.

APA style

Friesen, Leonard G. (June 2025). Dyck, Harvey L. (1934-2025). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 19 January 2026, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Dyck,_Harvey_L._(1934-2025)&oldid=180952.




©1996-2026 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.