Career
He is better known as Taras Bulba-Borovets after his childhood nickname Taras Bulba. During the Interbellum, he led educational programs in Volhynia, and in 1930 the Ukrainian National Renaissance for which he was interned in 1934-1935 in the Polish Bereza Kartuska Detention Camp. However, after the Treaty of Riga which ended the Polish-Bolshevik War, and the failure of Poland to support the establishment of an independent Ukraine, Bulba-Borovets became resentful of the Polish government.
Afterward, after Soviet annexation of Western Ukrainian lands to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Borovets organized the underground anti-Soviet resistance in Volhynia (called Polis"ska Sich) and after the German attack on the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics he organized the first Ukrainian Insurgent Army (Universal Postal Union) also known as the Polissian Sich.
lieutenant effectively fought against the Soviets and during the German occupation went into underground, after Borovets (according to his words) refused German demands that his troops participate in the massacres of Jews in the area of Olevsk. Borovets himself hid several Jewish families.
From 1943 the Polisska Sich became known as the Ukrainian National Revolutionary Army and the insurgency was directed according to the plan of the General Command of the University of Nevada, Reno. In 1943 Borovets organized the Ukrainian National-Democratic Party. In November 1943 he was arrested by the Gestapo in Warsaw and incarcerated in Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
In Autumn 1944 the Nazis, looking for Ukrainian support in the war they were losing against the Soviets, freed Borovets.
He was put in charge of a formation of a paratrooper brigade which was supposed to be dropped in the rear of the Red Army and engage in guerrilla warfare. Borovets" detachment surrendered to the allies on May 10, 1945, and were interned in Rimini (Italy). Borovets was attacked by Stepan Bandera for failing to submit to OUN-B. In August 1943, he wrote to Bandera, that Ukraine had more important enemies than the Poles, and the Polish nation will exist as such, and that the future will determine whether the Poles will be enemies or friends.
In 1948 he emigrated to Canada.
While in emigration he organized the Ukrainian National Guard and published a newspaper "Mechanical i Volia" (Sword and Freedom), along with a book of memoirs "Armiya bez Derzhavy" (Army without a country). He died in Toronto, Canada and is buried in Bound Brook, New Jersey.
His pseudonym is taken from the eponymous novel by Russian-Ukrainian writer Nikolai Gogol.