A perfect summer day welcomed nearly 3,000 festival-goers at the 28th Annual Ukrainian Independence Day Folk Festival, on Sunday, August 25, at the Ukrainian American Sport Center - Tryzubivka. The shady festival glade was adorned with the flags of the United States and Ukraine, and with the vibrant and colorful Ukrainian embroideries, folk arts and crafts, jewelry, emblems, motifs and wares displayed by the vendors.
Ukrainians, haling, directly or through ancestry, from nearly all regions of Ukraine, demonstrated solidarity with their homeland and with all fellow Ukrainians: Beautiful embroidered shirts and blouses, flags, Tryzubs, Ukrainian sports and thematic jerseys and our beautiful colors and language affirmed the presence of Ukraine’s immortal and immutable spirit, well before the concert had even started. Read More »
Representatives of the Republic of Korea awarded “Ambassador of Peace” Medals
and Citations to Ukrainian American Korean War and DMZ Conflict Veterans.
At this Philly-area Ukrainian Folk Festival, mad dance moves, pierogi, beer, and heritage swirl together
By Grace Dickinson, Updated: August 22, 2019
It was the final rehearsal for the Ukrainian Folk Festival, a long-running tradition, returning to Horsham Township’s Tryzub Ukrainian American Sports Center for its 28th year this Sunday, Aug. 25. It falls a day after Ukraine’s Independence Day, officially declared on Aug. 24, 1991. The Tryzub festival is one of the longest-running Independence Day festivals in the United States. Most of the festival’s 3,000 attendees are Ukrainian American, but in recent years, about 35 percent were non-Ukrainian. They show up for the sausage and pierogies, the martial arts-inspired dance moves, and the folky tunes from instruments like the accordion and the wooden flute, swirling together into high-tempo melodies. But they also connect on a deeper level. Read More »
Festival at Horsham's Tryzub center captures colors, sounds and flavors of Ukraine
By Brian Bingaman, August 22, 2019
First presented 28 years ago, to celebrate the one-year anniversary of Ukraine's independence from the Soviet Union, the Ukrainian Folk Festival at the Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center is back to excite your senses with music, dance, food, and arts and crafts.
It will be held noon to 8 p.m. Aug. 25 at the center at County Line and Lower State roads in Horsham. Admission is $15, $10 for students, free to youths under 15.
The festival's celebration of cultural and ethnic heritage features the colors and symbolism of the delicate pysanka Ukrainian Easter eggs, the acrobatic and energetic hopak dance, kolomiyka (polka) and folk songs, and draws around 3,000 people each year, according to Gene Luciw, the chairman of the Ukrainian Folk Festival Committee and Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center's director of media and public relations. Read More »
Innesa Performs Vittorio Monti's "Czardas":
Video courtesy of Ivan Warnega
Iskra and Voloshky Ukrainian Dance Ensembles perform “Arkan”
A Hutsul Carpathian Men’s Circle Dance
Video Courtesy of Ivan Warnega
Video: ISKRA AND VOLOSHKY Ukrainian Dance Ensembles perform Hopak, the world's most exciting folk dance
Video Courtesy of Wolodymyr Katolik
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/albums/72157710601688602
A Resplendent Outdoor Summer Concert
Marking Ukraine’s Independence, the Unity of her People
and Their Struggle for Freedom
The artists (dance troupes, musicians, singers and ensembles that have performed in previous years) have created a dynamic and integrated collaborative program.
Recent events in Ukraine, the Euromaidan Protest and Revolution of Dignity as well as the twilight struggle against unlawful Russian aggression, have forged a unified Ukrainian national identity, both in Ukraine and in the Diaspora. America’s support of Ukraine’s commitment to a self-determined democratic future - to life, liberty, freedom and justice – has created permanent bonds of friendship between the two nations. This year’s festival honors these special relationships and developments.
Every year in August, communities across America — from San Francisco, to Houston, to Chicago, to New York — celebrate Ukrainian Independence Day.
Nearly 900,000 people with Ukrainian heritage live in the United States. Many mark August 24, the day Ukraine gained its independence from the former Soviet Union... Read More »
Photo courtesy of Christine Syzonenko
12:00pm – Music & Dancing - Concessions, Vendors’ Grove & Children’s Fun Open
1:30 PM - Opening Ceremonies
2:00 P.M. to 4:30 P.M. Outdoor Festival Concert in Park
4:30 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. - Social Dance (“ZABAVA”) – to Live Music
Vox Ethnika: traditional, modern, contemporary, Ballroom & Polka
Admission - $15; Students - $10; Children 14 & under - Free; Free Parking
Purchase tickets online for only $10 » (Link is coming soon)
Tryzub members showing their cards at the gate will be admitted for $10.
Sponsor | Friend of UASC Tryzub |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Photo Gallery - Festival 2018 - Christine Syzonenko
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157700412972421
Photo Gallery - Festival 2018 - Kathy Park Photography
https://kathyparkphotography.pixieset.com/tryubfestival2018
Photo Gallery - Festival 2017
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157688906155474/with/26425036119
Photo Gallery - Festival 2016
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157672093217540
Photo Gallery - Festival 2015
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/albums/72157657627881839
Photo Gallery - Festival 2014
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157646985313002/
Festival 2013 photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157635303356464/
Festival 2010 photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157624660669439/with/4917823475/
Festival 2009 photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157622141049328/
Festival 2008 photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/7421005@N06/sets/72157606951982441/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Photos Courtesy of Christine Syzonenko