Following the bishop’s visit to Dickinson area, the Bismarck Tribune’s correspondent Lauren Donovan wrote in her newspaper:
“He came to bless the dead and visit the old. He himself is young, as he would be, having come from Ukraine, where his ancient religion has only been openly practiced since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Bishop Daniel (Zelinskyy) spent Friday afternoon in a Ukrainian settlement area southwest of Killdeer, where he blessed the memory of all the dead buried beneath the green sod in the Korsun Orthodox Cemetery…
“The bishop’s chanted blessing was accompanied by the sprinkling of holy water and the swinging of a censer. It was a stirring moment. The bishop’s voice reached out to those so long gone from the world, his purple vestments and black headdress speaking of a time so long unchanged. The names of the dead on the 40 or so gravestones were familiar to Bishop Daniel. He recognized traditional Ukrainian names of those who immigrated to escape economic and religious repression…
“The countryside around the church is reminiscent of Western Ukraine, ‘though there are no oil wells,’ said the bishop. The immigrants took their homestead claim, and in 1914, built the small church named for St. Pokrova, which was consecrated and used occasionally for about 50 years when visiting Ukrainian Orthodox priests traveled through.
“The Ukrainian settlers lived the remainder of their lives there in the hill country of Dunn County twined through by the Little Knife River. It was hard, but the church was their own.
“‘We must honor the memory of our forefathers on a daily basis…’ the bishop said. He knows what they experienced… He himself was only 19 when he first encountered religion, going at the urging of his mother to the house of a family friend where clandestine prayers were being said for Pascha…”