Hanna Vasylivna Arsenych-Baran (Ukrainian: Баран Ганна Василівна; 26 June 1970 – 1 April 2021) was a Ukrainian novelist, poet, school teacher and writer of prose. She was the author of more than a hundred textbooks on the Ukrainian language and literature as well as multiple dictionaries. Arsenych-Baran was a teacher who taught the Ukrainian language and literature in Chernihiv and educated students at the K. D. Ushinsky South Ukrainian National Pedagogical University. She won the Mykhailo Kotsyubynsky Regional Prize and the Leonid Glibov Regional Prize. Arsenych-Baran was a member of the National Writers' Union of Ukraine, become chair of its Chernihiv regional organisation in November 2016.
Arsenych-Baran's career commenced as a teacher of Ukrainian language and literature in the schools of Kosiv Raion.[2] In 1998, she relocated to Chernihiv with members of her family,[4] and worked at the Lyceum No.15.[5] She received an invitation to work as an methodologist in the Department of Social Sciences and Humanities. Arsenych-Baran went on to be appointed as a senior lecturer at the Department of Philology and Methods of Teaching of the K. D. Ushinsky South Ukrainian National Pedagogical University that she led from 2015.[5] She became a member of the National Writers' Union of Ukraine in 1998.[3] Arsenych-Baran was elected chair of the National Writers' Union of Ukraine's Chernihiv regional organisation in November 2016.[5][6]
Arsenych-Baran published her first collection of poetry, Towel on Viburnum, in 1997 and then authored a second poetry collection entitled Cherry Music the following year.[6] In 2001, she published the collection of poetry Blooming Hawthorn and the book of prose Under the Apples of Paradise in the same year.[4] Arsenych-Baran wrote the prose book On Monday everything will be different and the poetry collection Trembling Hyacinths two years later. In 2005, she followed up with the publication of the poetry collection Hope in the Spring, the book of prose As the moon rises and the novel Quiet Street of the Evening City.[6] Arsenych-Baran authored Sweet Words of prose in 2010,[5] compiled the anthology of 3,000 Ukrainian Christian verse prayers from the 19th to early 21st centuries called Prayer raises the sky the following year,[2] as well as the novels Muska and Rejoice, Bride! in 2018.[5] She compiled the Dictionary of Ukrainian-Russian interlingual homonyms in 2020,[5] a collection of nearly 4,000 words in Russian and Ukrainian which she had worked on for half a decade.[7]
She also wrote a number of songs for some composers.[3] Arsenych-Baran was named a laurete of the Mykhailo Kotsyubynsky Regional Prize in September 2006 for her work on the novel Quiet Street of the Evening City,[4][8] as well as the Leonid Glibov Regional Prize. Her works have been translated into Armenian, Belarusian and English.[5] Arsenych-Baran was the publisher of more than a hundred textbooks on the Ukrainian language and literature.[1] She also published multiple dictionaries,[9][10] and she was the author of fourteen books of prose and poetry.[1] Arsenych-Baran's works were also published in local magazines.[2]
Personal life
Arsenych-Baran was married to the rector of the Friday Church, Myron Baran, whom she met at university.[2][10] The couple had a child.[9][10] On the late evening of 1 April 2021, she died suddenly of COVID-19 complications following her being discharged from hospital with improvement to her condition a day earlier. Arsenych-Baran's funeral service and burial was held two days later.[1]
Legacy
Chernihiv Oblast Council said that Arsenych-Baran had "enriched the creative treasury of Chernihiv and Ukraine with interesting and profound novels, a number of poetic and prose works, actively engaged in scientific and methodological activities."[11]
^ abcdefgBrik, Alexey (8 March 2017). "Королева тонкого полотна і гармонії" [Queen of fine canvas and harmony]. White House (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
^"Пам'яті Ганни Арсенич-Баран" [In memory of Hanna Arsenych-Baran] (in Ukrainian). Chernihiv Regional Literary-Memorial Museum of Mykhailo Kotsiubinsky. 2 April 2021. Archived from the original on 21 April 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
^"Світлій пам'яті Ганни Арсенич-Баран" [Bright memory of Hanna Arsenych-Baran] (in Ukrainian). Chernihiv Regional Council. 2 April 2021. Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 12 March 2022.