Ukrainian Brazilians

Ukrainian Brazilians
Ucraino-brasileiros
Українські бразильці
BrazilUkraine

Ukrainian descendants in Curitiba.
Total population
c. 600,000[1]
0.3% of Brazil's population (2020)
Regions with significant populations
Brazil: Mainly Paraná[2] and in minor degree Mato Grosso do Sul and São Paulo. Brazilian diaspora in Argentina: Misiones; Paraguay: Itapúa; and Canada: Toronto and Montreal.
Languages
Predominantly Ukrainian in the countryside, Portuguese in urban areas and Russian (Historically)
Religion
85% Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church[3]  · minority Eastern Orthodox Church and Judaism · other Christians
Related ethnic groups
White Brazilians · Russian Brazilians · Polish Brazilians · Lithuanian Brazilians

Ukrainian Brazilians (Portuguese: Ucraino-brasileiro, Ucraniano-brasileiro; Ukrainian: Українські бразильці, Ukrayins'ki Brazyl'tsi) are Brazilian citizens born in Ukraine, or Brazilians of Ukrainian descent who remain connected, in some degree, to Ukrainian culture.

In 1994, 400,000 people of Ukrainian descent lived in Brazil, 80% (or approximately 350,000) of whom lived in a compact region approximately 5,000 square kilometres (1,930 sq mi) in size (an area slightly smaller than Trinidad and Tobago), in the hilly south central part of the state of Paraná in southern Brazil.[2][3] They refer to this region as "Brazilian Ukraine."[4][5] Smaller numbers of Ukrainians have settled in São Paulo, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul, Pernambuco, and Paraíba.[3]

The cities with the largest number of Ukrainians are Prudentópolis (approximately 38,000 Ukrainians, or 75% of the city's population), Curitiba (33,000 Ukrainians), and União da Vitória (approximately 26,400 Ukrainians or 50% of the city's population).[6] In 2021, the population of Ukrainian descent in Brazil is estimated to be at 600,000.[1] Ukrainian-Brazilians also settled in neighboring regions of Argentina and Paraguay, notably Misiones in Argentina and Itapúa in Paraguay both regions already had a significant Ukrainian and Polish ancestral composition. There is also a significant community of Ukrainian and Polish Brazilians in North America, concentrated in Toronto and Montreal. Around 5% of Canadians of Ukrainian and Polish ancestry have origins in Latin America.

Brazil has the third largest Ukrainian community in the Americas,[2] and the third largest Ukrainian population outside of the former Soviet Union; only Canada and the United States have larger Ukrainian populations. In comparison to Ukrainians in North America, the Ukrainian community in Brazil (as well as in neighboring Argentina) tends to be more descended from earlier waves of immigration, is poorer, more rural, has less organizational strength, and is more focused on the Church as the center of cultural identity.[7]

Seventy percent of Brazil's Ukrainians live in agricultural communities known as "colonies" where they tend crops such as wheat, rye, buckwheat, rice, black beans, and erva mate, a local type of tea.[3] These colonies are isolated from modern areas of Brazil's economy and from non-Ukrainians, and in many respects closely resemble Galician (Western Ukrainian) villages of the 19th century.[8]

  1. ^ a b "Brazil". Ukrainian World Congress. Archived from the original on April 25, 2021. Retrieved November 23, 2021. (source and date unmentioned)
  2. ^ a b c "Etnias: Ucranianos" [Ethnicities: Ukrainians]. Portal of Services and Information of the Government of Paraná (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on March 12, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d Oksana Boruszenko and Rev. Danyil Kozlinsky (1994). Ukrainians in Brazil (Chapter), in Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World, edited by Ann Lencyk Pawliczko, University of Toronto Press: Toronto, pp. 443-454
  4. ^ admin3 (August 1, 2007). "Prudentópolis a bela Ucrânia brasileira". Planeta (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved December 17, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Ukrainian Diaspora in Brazil by Marina Bondarenko
  6. ^ Ukrainian Observer, "Ukrainian Community of Brazil" June 23, 2004
  7. ^ Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 566. ISBN 0-8020-8390-0.
  8. ^ Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 546. ISBN 0-8020-8390-0.

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