Andrei Sheptytskyi served as Greek Catholic Metropolitan of Lviv from 1901 until his death in 1944, navigating the city through four successive occupying powers — Austro-Hungarian, Polish, Soviet, and Nazi — without abandoning his congregation. During the German occupation he sheltered hundreds of Jews, including Rabbi David Kahane, in monasteries and private homes across Galicia, an effort recognized posthumously by Yad Vashem. His 2015 commemorative issue appeared as part of Ukraine's long-running circulation commemorative program, which has used the 2 hryvni denomination extensively since the late 1990s to honor Ukrainian cultural and historical figures.
Andrei Sheptytskyi served as Greek Catholic Metropolitan of Lviv from 1901 until his death in 1944, navigating the city through four successive occupying powers — Austro-Hungarian, Polish, Soviet, and Nazi — without abandoning his congregation. During the German occupation he sheltered hundreds of Jews, including Rabbi David Kahane, in monasteries and private homes across Galicia, an effort recognized posthumously by Yad Vashem. His 2015 commemorative issue appeared as part of Ukraine's long-running circulation commemorative program, which has used the 2 hryvni denomination extensively since the late 1990s to honor Ukrainian cultural and historical figures.