Eastern Catholics from western
Ukraine began arriving in 1897, as part of a wave of emigration from the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. However these were often ensnared into
indentured servitude on
sugar plantations in Hawaii, and were not able to develop their own churches. Ukrainian Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish clergy in mainland North America pressured the
San Francisco Chronicle to investigate, and on July 24, 1899 the newspaper's headline blared "Slavery in Hawaii Under the American Flag". Once freed, many of the Ukrainians departed for Canada, where there was a larger wave of Ukrainian settlement and many had relatives. In 1975, the community began meeting for
Divine Liturgy at
St. Anthony Roman Catholic Church, Kalihi Kai, Honolulu with the late Reverend
Archimandrite Jules C. E. Riotte, Episcopal vicar for the Eastern Rite. The community subsequently met at Saint Sophia Chapel in Waianae, with Reverend Philip Harmon as its pastor. On October 29, 2005, Most Reverend Richard Stephen Seminack,
Eparch of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Nicholas in Chicago visited Hawaii, announced the retirement of Father Harmon, the move of the parish to Kuliouou, and the grant of bi-ritual eparchial faculties to Reverend Halbert Weidner, C.O., pastor of
Holy Trinity Church. Bishop Seminack installed Father Weidner as the pastor of Saint Sophia Ukrainian Greek Catholic mission parish. The Ukrainian church is no longer at 5919 Kalanianaole Hwy., Honolulu, Hawaii. A physical location resides at 1300 Pali Hwy, Suite 204, Honolulu, Hawaii 96813. While ritually similar, the Eastern Catholic Community of Hawaii is distinct from the
Eastern Orthodox Communities of Hawaii. ==See also==