Same here. Part of the problem between the Ukrainians and the Ruthenians is that they really aren’t separate nationalities; the different hierarchies were created in the 1900s (1927, I think) when there was a danger of the Ukrainian Church becoming more populated than the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania. A brilliant decision by the Third Council of Baltimore had forbad the creation of a Roman Catholic province in Pennsylvania if Eastern Catholics out-populated Romans, but they needed such a province by this point. Easy solution: Invent a distinction between Ukrainians and Ruthenians.
There was sworn allegiance of the bishop to Hungary to contend with also, and US faithful demanding a bishop either Ukrainian or Hungarian to match their identification.
Also there are different languages, custome, and variations of the Divine Liturgy, etc., even though there may be a common genetic background. And genetics is certainly significant because the Father’s ritual church is generally the inherited one.
A person in Carpatho-Ukraine born in 1914 and living 85 years in the same location, could have had six nationalities:
1867 Austro-Hungary
1919 Czechoslovakia
1939 Carpatho-Ukraine independence (24 hours)
1939 Hungary
1945 USSR
1991 Ukraine
(U) = Ukrainian Church sui iuris
(R) = Ruthenian Church sui iuris
Eparchy Timeline through 1963:
? Lemkowszczyzna (U)
? Kamyanets (U)
1087 Przemysl (U)
1596 Union of Brest (Poland) (U)
1646 Union of Ungvar (Hungary) (R)
1677 Lviv (U) (later moved to Kiev)
1771 Mukacheve (R)
1777 Krizevci (Croatian)
1818 Presov (Slovak)
1885 Ivano-Frankivsk (U)
1912 Canadian Exarchate (U)
1912 Hajdudorog (Hungarian)
1919 Czechoslovakia
1922 Ukrainian SSRR
1924 Apostolic Exarchate Miskolc (Hungarian)
1924 Ukrainian Exarchate USA 1924 – Bishop Constantine Bohachevsky (U)
1924 Ruthenian Exarchate USA 1924 – Bishop Basil Takach (R)
1938 Czechoslovakia, Carpatho-Ukraine autonomy
1939 Carpatho-Ukraine independence (24 hours)
1939 Hungary takes Carpatho-Ukraine
1945 USSR takes Carpatho-Ukraine
1958 Metropolitan Archeparchy of Philadelphia from Exarchate (U)
1963 Eparchy of Pittsburgh from Exarchate (R)