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Today in Canada > News > IN PHOTOS | Orthodox Easter arrives in Toronto
News

IN PHOTOS | Orthodox Easter arrives in Toronto

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Last updated: 2026/04/11 at 1:42 PM
Press Room Published April 11, 2026
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IN PHOTOS | Orthodox Easter arrives in Toronto
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Estimated 4 minutes

The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

A week after most Canadians have put away their decorations and moved on, Ukrainian, Greek and other Orthodox communities across the country are gathering to celebrate Easter this weekend.

Unlike most Christians in Canada and abroad, Orthodox Christians follow the Julian calendar, which places their Easter one week later.

In the Ukrainian community, families spend days before Easter decorating pysanky — eggs intricately dyed with wax and coloured in patterns passed down through generations. They also gather for hayilky, traditional spring circle dances performed outdoors after Easter to welcome warmer weather.

And at the centre of it all is the basket blessing, known in Ukrainian as sviachennia. Families bring elaborately prepared baskets of food to church to be blessed by a priest, marking the end of weeks of fasting.

“We go from fast to feast,” said Father Andrij Figol of Christ the Good Shepherd St. Michael’s Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.

A woman in grey coat, carrying a basket and walking by the front of a church.
A worshipper arrives at Christ the Good Shepherd St. Michael’s Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Toronto on April 4. (Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Traditions beyond religion

For many in Toronto’s Ukrainian community, these traditions carry meaning beyond religion. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion in Ukraine four years ago, over 300,000 Ukrainians have settled in Canada, and for many, familiar rituals offer something irreplaceable.

“It’s almost like having one foot in this country of Canada, but also having one foot in Ukraine,” Father Andrij said.

CBC photographer Oksana Shtohryn attended the basket blessing ceremonies at two Ukrainian Greek Catholic churches in Toronto on April 4.

Greek Catholics celebrate Easter on the same date as most Canadians, but follow the same basket blessing tradition as Orthodox Ukrainians, who mark the holiday this weekend.

At Christ the Good Shepherd Church, worshippers wait for the basket blessing ceremony to begin. Each basket, filled with traditional foods and topped with a lit candle, was prepared at home before being brought to church for the blessing.

People sitting in chairs in their winter clothes in front of a table with baskets of food.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

In the first image of the animated GIF, a woman in a vyshyvanka — a traditional Ukrainian embroidered shirt worn during religious and cultural celebrations — tends to her Easter basket, filled with Easter bread, eggs, butter, kielbasa and other foods saved for the feast after fasting.

A woman at a food basket filled table looking over a basket, and a closeup of the food baskets filled with bread, eggs, treats, sausages and candles.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Dozens of Easter baskets line the tables as the congregation gathers and the priests lead opening prayers before the blessing begins.

Food baskets with candles lit laid out on white-cloth tables, with people standing in the back of a church room.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Father Andrij blesses the baskets with holy water, sprinkling each one as he moves through the hall. He said the blessed baskets are meant to carry the light of Easter beyond the church walls.

A father in robe holding a brass container and brush, with onlookers in the distance inside a church room.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

“It’s like being a little kid again,” Father Andrij said when asked why he sprinkles holy water over the congregation as well as the baskets. “It’s the joy of life — that life overcomes everything.”

A father sprinkling parishioners with holy water from a brush.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Addressing parishioners after the blessing, Father Andrij urges them to return for Easter Sunday’s main celebration. Though the baskets are blessed on Saturday, the fast is not broken until after the Sunday service.

A father in robe holding a cross with one hand and gesturing with his other hand in front of churchgoers standing around tables filled with food baskets.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Worshippers then make their way toward the iconostasis in the main hall. On Holy Saturday, a shroud depicting the crucified Christ is placed at the front of the church, turning the space into a symbolic tomb before Sunday’s resurrection.

Worshippers inside a church near the main altar.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

A worshipper sits in the pews between services on Holy Saturday, in front of an icon of the Virgin Mary and a candle stand.

A bird's-eye view of church pews, with a man sitting and candles lit in front of a poster of Mary and baby Christ.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

A parishioner carries his blessed basket home after the ceremony. The food inside will remain untouched until the family’s Easter breakfast on Sunday morning.

A closeup of the back of a person holding a basket in one hand filled with bread, sausages and candles, while the other hand holds a staircase railing and walking down steps.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

Tables overflow with Easter baskets at St. Demetrius the Great Martyr Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. Similar scenes are expected at Ukrainian Orthodox churches across Toronto this weekend, with ceremonies running from morning to evening.

Food baskets fill tables laid together in an X-shape; they're each lit with a candle as churchgoers stand in the back of a room.

(Oksana Shtohryn/CBC)

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