Education
At this time, he completed his education at an institute for journalism.
At this time, he completed his education at an institute for journalism.
Movchan moved to Zhytomyr to pursue secondary school but, due to his family"s persecution as kurkuls, left for Kharkiv, Ukraine"s capital at the time where he began a new life. Escaping the ravages of the famine that engulfed most of rural Ukraine, Julian Movchan worked in a factory while editing its newspaper. However, disappointed with increasing censorship of the 1930s and unwilling for moral reasons to join the communist party, Movchan abandoned his career in journalism and entered medical school.
When the Soviet Army occupied western Ukraine in 1939, he transferred his studies to Lviv.
During the subsequent German occupation, he resumed his journalistic work, denouncing the Stalinist regime. During this time he also treated wounded soldiers of the Universal Postal Union when they were smuggled into the city.
When the Soviets returned, he fled westward and completed his medical studies in Munich. In 1949, he moved to America, eventually settling outside Cleveland, Ohio.
After leaving Ukraine Movchan befriended Volodymyr Vynnychenko, the exiled president of Ukraine.
The two had much in common: they were both eastern Ukrainian writers of humble origins with a left-wing but anti-Soviet patriotic Ukrainian political orientation. After Vynnychenko"s death, Movchan was invited by his widow to move to France and serve as caretaker of Vynnychenko"s archives. Movchan declined, but donated many of Vynnychenko"s letters to the archives at Columbia University.
Movchan continued to write until his death in January 2002.