Jerry and Margaret Yacyshen Family

Ernie (Orest) Sorochuk

Ernie (Orest) Sorochuk

Male 1934 - 2009  (75 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ernie (Orest) SorochukErnie (Orest) Sorochuk was born on 23 Jan 1934 in Swan Plain, Saskatchewan, Canada; died on 22 Apr 2009 in Norquay, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried on 27 Apr 2009 in Canora Cemetery, Canora, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Notes:

    Eulogy
    Monday April 27, 2009
    Written and Delivered by Blair Fantillo

    Mark Twain said: "The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A
    man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time." To me, this
    sums up how Ernie Sorochuk, how Grampa, lived his life. He lived
    life to the full and he lived it his own terms. Grampa was never
    someone to be swayed by social convention - he did what suited
    him - and did it without a care about what others would think or
    say. So few of us can truly say that they approach their own lives
    in the same way - maybe we like to say we live on our own
    terms....but in our weaker moments, we worry about what people
    might say or what they might think - and we take the safe path -
    the path that doesn't stand out - but not Ernie. There can be no
    doubt that Ernie was one of a kind.

    Ernest Sorochuk was born in the middle of the Depression on
    January 23rd, 1934, down the road in Swan Plain the second of
    five children, to Metro and Anne Sorochuk. Ernie attended school
    at Swan Plain but by Grade 8 - enough was enough. But what
    Ernie lacked in formal education, he made up for in raw
    intelligence and force of personality - tangle with him, and you'd
    learn that lesson quick.

    They say that opposites attract and to prove that, Ernie married
    Bernadette Martyniuk on July 23rd, 1955. God only knows what
    George and Lena Martyniuk must have thought of Ernie when he
    first arrived on the scene with their daughter, Bernadette (fresh out
    of Sacred Heart Girl's academy) what with his loud pickup and
    greased-up, slicked-back hair. The marriage worked, though - 54
    years and the fact that you are all here today is evidence of that.

    In the early days of their marriage, Ernie and Bernadette, and their
    growing family lived across Canada, from BC to Quebec, as they
    followed Grampa's work on the pipeline. Ernie settled the family
    for good in Norquay in 1964.
    Over his 75 years,Ernie played many roles. He was a husband to
    Bernadette, a brother to Bill, Adeline, Mary and Eugene a father to
    Deb, Loretta, Bruce and Neil, a grandfather, a great-grandfather
    and friend to everyone here today. And over those 75 years-he
    toiled as a pipeline foreman, a land-clearing contractor and
    sometimes farmer. He was even a meat cutter - which partly
    explains his passion for getting deals on good cuts of meat.
    (sometimes dozens of pounds of good cuts of meat).

    Grampa had a number of hobbies throughout his life - some of
    them ordinary, some of them not so ordinary. He had a passion
    for gardening, mushroom picking and cooking & frying....the man
    had a passion for food.....| know we are all going to miss the
    shishliki, the sauerkraut and dills! Later in life, as the size of his
    garden grew, and the available mouths to feed shrank he had too
    much food to use. Ernie, not wanting to see his fresh produce go
    to waste, he loaded up the truck full of potatos, tomatoes, cukes,
    onions and whatever other kind of vegetable he had and took them
    to the NICE centre, Key Reserve and points in between and gave
    away his those vegetables to anyone who came by.

    Of his more exceptional hobbies, he kept bees, he even raised
    wild boar. He also had a passion for travelling - earlier in life this
    passion included Texas and Mexico. Later in life he focussed his
    passion for travel on the Ukraine - there might be those who
    thought these trips to Ukraine weren't the best idea - but it's a safe
    bet that Ernie didn't care.

    Of all his hobbies, though, the one that stands out the strongest is
    Grampa's love for "getting a good deal". I'm sure everyone here
    today has witnessed or at least heard about one Ernie's legendary
    bargain buys. Whether it's the 100 cans of soon-to-expire Nabob
    coffee or the five 40-pound bags of Rooster brand rice (enough to
    Start a Chinese restaurant) to go with his newly-purchased rice
    cooker, Ernie was permanently on a hunt for a bargain. This
    bargain hunt continued until the day before he died when, he
    called Neil in Saskatoon and asked him to rush to Zellers to pick
    up a razor that he found on sale in that morning's Zellers flyer.

    It could be that people all-too-frequently make the mistake of
    equating education with intelligence....but any of you who ever got
    into an argument with Ernie - political or otherwise - would have to
    re-think that opinion. Despite his lack of formal education, Ernie
    had a surprisingly wide world view - and while not everyone would
    agree with that world view whether it be about world politics or
    goings on in the Ukraine, or elsewhere in the world, there were few
    issues that Ernie did not have an opinion about.

    Over the last few days, I've had the privilege of speaking to many
    of you about Ernie and have listened to the stories that you've
    shared. The thing that strikes me most about what you shared
    with me was what those stories had in common: There was no
    pretence to Ernie. With Grampa - what you saw was what you got:
    this original - this one of a kind. Ernie was a man who loved
    people and loved interacting with people. Everyone here knows
    firsthand how quick Ernie was to share a story or a laugh and
    more often than not, an opinion....Even if he had somewhere to go,
    or something to do - he always had time for people. This was
    perhaps his most endearing quality - and one he will be long, and
    maybe best, remembered for.

    With his gruff and rough & tumble exterior, it's not often that we got
    to see any other side of Grampa. Bernadette, with the help of his
    family took good care of Ernie over the last few years and although
    he might not always have outwardly expressed it, he was
    appreciative of this love and support. I'm told that, at night before
    going to bed, Grandma would bring Grampa his meds. Grampa
    would take his meds, and look at Grandma and say: "Mom - you
    know | love you, don't you?". She knew, of course, and she loved
    him too. Ernie loved Bernadette, he loved his family and he loved
    his friends.

    Ernie married Bernadette Rose Martyniuk on 23 Jul 1955 in Holy Trinity Ukrainian Catholic Church, Norquay, Saskatchewan, Canada. Bernadette (daughter of George (Yurko) Martyniuk and Wasylena (Wasylyna)(Lena) Romashenko) was born on 5 Jun 1934 in Norquay, Saskatchewan, Canada; died on 17 Oct 2022 in Canora, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried on 21 Oct 2022 in Canora Cemetery, Canora, Saskatchewan, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Bruce Ernest Sorochuk died Nov., 2017 in a fatal car accident in Saskatoon.

    Children:
    1. D.L. Sorochuk
    2. L.A. Sorochuk
    3. Bruce Ernest Sorochuk was born on 28 Jan 1961 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; died on 25 Nov 2017 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada 103-AL007SH.
    4. N.G. Sorochuk

Generation: 2



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