Eugene Hlywa
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Eugene Hlywa (5 December 1925, Nosiv village, now Ternopil Raion, Ternopil region, Ukraine – 6 August 2017 Sydney, Australia[1]) was a psychologist, psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, and public figure.
Eugene Hlywa was born in 1925, in Nosiv village, Ternopil region of Ukraine. His parents, Maria née Lutsiv and Leonid Hlywa, brought up Eugene and his elder brother, Teofil, in the spirit of Ukrainian nationalism that was so symbolic of the Ukrainian conscientious society at the beginning of 20th century. In his teenage years, Eugene Hlywa joined the UPA (Ukrainian Insurgent Army).
During the Second World War as a member of OUN (Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists), Eugene Hlywa initially performed duties of an ideological advisor, and then of intelligence agent and soldier.
In 1943, Eugene Hlywa was captured by the Nazis. A German military court sentenced him to execution by firing squad, which was to take place within 24 hours. Initially awaiting for his execution in Rzeszów prison, he then was transferred to Dębica detention center and subsequently to Montelupich Prison in Kraków. The death sentence was replaced by incarceration in concentration camps. Eugene Hlywa was an inmate at such ill-famed Nazi concentration camps as: Gross-Rosen, Mauthausen and Ebensee. He was freed from the Ebensee concentration camp on 5 May 1945 along with other inmates by the US army.
Shortly after his release, Eugene returned to his OUN activities. His division was responsible for prevention of Moscow's secret services capturing and forcible exportation of the USSR citizens, who became political prisoners and refugees during the war back to the USSR. In 1947, Yaroslav Stetsko, the OUN and ABN (Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations) leader, entrusted Eugene Hlywa with organising the ABN intelligence division, which he headed until disbanding of ABN in 1996 following the dissolution of the USSR.
Along with political activities, Hlywa continued his education. He studied law and political sciences in the UFU (Ukrainian Free University) in Munich. He published newspaper articles under pseudonyms and participated in the community, student and religious life.[2]
Once travelling to Australia, for two years, Eugene Hlywa worked in the remote regions of Western Australia, to comply with one of the requirements of the Immigration Department contract.