Ontario Abandoned Places will be rebranded as Ominous Abandoned Places

Woodstock Studite Monastery

Demolished Church in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada

Nov 14 2014

 |  3752
 |  1
Recent status Demolished
Location # 11434

This property belongs to the Studite Fathers, a Ukrainian religious group. Studites work for eight hours, rest for eight hours and pray for eight hours. The Studites are one of the oldest monastic orders of the church. They have a board of directors and monastery located near Rome.

The Studites own hundreds of acres of land in Woodstock which over the years they've slowly sold off to developers.

The Woodstock monastery was operated by a monk named Reverend Evtimy Wolinski (Herbert Wolinski). Wolinski is the last membr of his order in Canada. An order dating back to AD 500.

In June of 2000, Wolinski was responsible for establishing the Woodstock Peace Lighthouse of Icons which contained more than 100 religious icons and religious paintings. Wolinski hoped to create interest in the monastery and attract tourists. By winter construction had halted on the $2.5 million project as the monastery was unable to pay the bills.

Around June of 2009, a woman named Viktoriya Abelyar was hired by the Studite Fathers to help organize a Ukranian-speaking prayer group known as the "Keepers of the Light". She volunteered to perform secretarial work and gardening at the church and in return was allowed to live on the property and was provided with food and health care.

In January of 2010 Wolinski and Abelyar began an intimate common-law relationship which resulted in the birth of a child. The church responded by forbidding Abelyar from being on the church property. The church also removed Wolinski from his duties at the monestary. While priests are allowed to marry, monks are not permitted to. Wolinski now survives through his old-age pension
[u]
Personal notes:
[/u]
I'd been keeping a watch on this location. During my second visit in 2014 I walked around trying all the doors. I thought it was going to be with the same disappointing results until I tried one door and it opened. Adrenaline pumping, I hurried back to the car and gathered my camera gear.

New owners have since purchased the property and boarded up the windows and doors. This led frustrated youths to begin throwing rocks through the stained glass windows. Someone then kicked in a ground level window board and the church and hallways spray painted with graffiti.

Comments

Please log in to leave a comment

 • 

2 years ago

https://youtu.be/MrL4TOPaODk

 • 

2 years ago

Demolition has began today

 • 

4 years ago

Make me sick to look at these photos and how others can destroy something that was so beautiful. I always wanted to go in and so sorry now I never did.

 • 

4 years ago

it is fully demolished

 • 

8 years ago

Sat. June 11, 4pm. 1 front window broken and roughly, unprofessionally boarded up. The window sticks look proper now along bottom. I was there for awhile but could not find a way in. Asshats keeping someone busy.

 • 

8 years ago

Update: Sat. June 4, 2016 9am. Monastery. repaired and/or re-locked and I see sticks in the basement windows[ but angled not square to window] I don't think I saw before.....Larry lock-nic was here last week sometime. It was still a nice country drive.

 • 

8 years ago

Herb should have slowly become a priest first. 32 years a monk and now being sued for child support. Good luck old man.

 • 

8 years ago

Wow nice effect Photo T. I would love to try a 1910-ish bellows camera with the wet plates you have to transfer in a light proof box to the camera, insert them, and take the picture before they dry. You have to add really bright lights as well.

 • 

9 years ago

I wish I was able to come in the day. Lovely photo's OAP. The BW photo's in my album here were shot on a Holga with Medium format slide film.

 • 

9 years ago

Such a lovely place, I wish the tower was open. I agree, I'm happy someone cares about it. Very interesting story too.

 • 

9 years ago

Beautiful building, I'm actually glad it's being cared for with all those contents, very unique!

 • 

9 years ago

Excellent find and photos.

 • 

10 years ago

Great shots and story. Out of curiosity, is this property abandoned or simply used infrequently? It looks to be pretty clean, and I didn't see much dust in the photos.

 • 

10 years ago

Great addition to the database. Great write up on the history of the people and the order as well.

 • 

10 years ago

One of the definitive locations of the future for Ontario for sure. Will be a pleasure to watch this place decay. Somehow though, I don't think that will happen. Betting they'll either perform bare maintenance of it forever or sell the building.

 • 

10 years ago

Cool location, great post.