
‘A beautiful Winnipeg charm': A journey inside the enchanted history of the Witch's Hut
Any seasoned Winnipegger worth their salmon 1999 Pan-Am Games jacket knows exactly the place I describe.
A cherished local attraction, the Witch's Hut has enchanted visitors of all ages for over 50 years.
A volunteer named Jim Zacharkiw opens its doors each May.
'It's fun to watch the kids come in. Some are okay and brave. The younger ones can get very scared,' he said.
And for good reason.
The Witch's Hut
The open, red door to the Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park invites visitors inside on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
'Next to a great forest there lived a poor woodcutter with his wife and two children'
The story comes to life inside the conical roofed, fieldstone-walled cottage adorned with faux gingerbread cookies.
Visitors big and small step inside to find terra cotta panels lining the walls, illustrating the classic Brothers Grimm folk tale of starvation, survival, and sugar.
The Witch's Hut
Terra cotta panels in the Witch's Hut are pictured on July 30, 2025. They were created by sculptor Elfriede Leopoldine Geier Berger and depict the story of 'Hansel and Gretel.' (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
From there, they pass a barred cell beneath a log staircase, where a little Hansel mannequin is trapped inside. They climb the stairs to find the evil mannequin Witch herself, perennially tending to a magical brew on her faux wood stove, as mannequin Gretel sweeps the floor, plotting her escape.
'I used to take my daughter here when she was a kid. It looks exactly the same,' said a man named Bobby who visited the hut on a hot July day.
'This has become a little tradition,' he said, gesturing to the little girl and boy clinging to him – his grandkids.
Fittingly, the Witch's Hut was built with just this tradition in mind.
The Witch's Hut
The menacing Witch mannequin tends to a pot over her stove as Gretel sweeps the floor inside the Witch's Hut on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
'Then all together they set forth into the woods'
The Witch's Hut first opened its wooden doors in 1970.
Built by the German-Manitoban community, the hut was a gift to the children of Winnipeg to celebrate the city's centennial.
'It was also a way to advise people that some of these Disney World fairy tales that they show are all based on the stories that came from Germany,' explained Carola Lange, a past president of the German-Canadian Congress.
'Some of the fairy tales are a little bit scary from way back when, when they were first written.'
The Witch's Hut
Hansel is trapped in a barred cell in the Witch's Hut at Kildonan Park on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
'Who is nibbling at my house?'
That's because folk tales like 'Hansel and Gretel' were not exclusively written with children in mind, explained Pauline Greenhill, a professor in the University of Winnipeg's women's and gender studies department and an expert in folklore, folk tales and fairy tale depictions in media.
It's believed the German-born Brothers Grimm first popularized 'Hansel and Gretel' in an 1812 book of collected folk tales, though the story can be traced back even further to many countries all around the world.
The Brothers Grimm
The Brothers Grimm in 1847. (daguerreotype)
Unlike some of the other Grimm tales, like 'Snow White' and 'Cinderella,' 'Hansel and Gretel' never got the full Disney treatment, Greenhill notes.
'Disney is not going to make a movie about a mother who sends her children out to starve in the woods,' she said.
'The traditional tale is not nice and sweet.'
Still, the story of babes lost in the woods has held a certain cultural fascination, Greenhill said, even without the almighty House of Mouse engine powering it.
'People have definitely focused on the whole idea of it being a story about hunger and starvation historically. More recently, there have been quite a few horror films that are based on 'Hansel and Gretel.'
Hansel and Gretel
Illustration of Hansel and Gretel, a well-known German folktale from the Brothers Grimm, by Arthur Rackham, 1909.
'She grabbed Hansel with her withered hand and carried him to a little stall'
Grim as the source material may be, the hut was designed by German-Manitoban architect Hans Peter Langes, who immigrated from Datteln to Winnipeg in 1951, encountering plenty of post-Second World War vitriol as he opened his own architecture firm.
'In business, sure, it was difficult for him, and there were times where contractors would not want to do business with him because he was from Germany,' his daughter Jane Langes said.
Hans Peter Langes
Hans Peter Langes is pictured in Winnipeg in 1951. (Jane Langes)
Still, he did not hesitate when asked to design the hut as a nod to his German heritage, she recalled.
He remained equally steadfast when he presented his design for the earth-toned, rounded structure to the hut's planning committee, one that expected a more rainbow, candy-coated cottage.
More Hans Christian Andersen and less Grimm.
Still, his vision won out and construction began in 1967. The $18,000 price tag was mainly bankrolled by donations, city records say.
The Witch's Hut
Hans Peter Langes' original design for the Witch's Hut is shown in a 1967 rendering. (Jane Lange)
Jane, then five years old, shared the committee's initial displeasure when her father took her and her siblings to see the finished cottage in 1970.
'I was furious. I looked at it, and I said, 'why is it round?' Because in my mind, I was wanting to see what I saw in storybooks, right? Kind of that swooped roof with the icing icicles hanging off,' she recalled.
'I was a critic.'
The Witch's Hut
The Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park is pictured on a summer day circa 1970. (City of Winnipeg Archives, Witch's Hut at Kildonan Park in summer, Item i04582)
'Hansel, stick out your finger, so I can feel if you are fat yet'
The structure has had some improvements in the decades since.
The cedar shake roof was replaced by the city in 2014.
Archival photos show a particularly menacing former version of the witch – a wart-nosed sorceress atop a broomstick, suspended from the ceiling with a cat on her back.
The Witch's Hut
The Witch flies on her broomstick inside Kildonan Park's the Witch's Hut on Oct. 25, 1970. It was then called the Fairy Tale Cottage. (City of Winnipeg Archives)
Zacharkiw tells me the original faux gingerbread cookies, which were a grayish brown to match the roof, were traded in for more colourful, more durable ones that could stand up to Winnipeg's notoriously wicked winters.
'They take quite the beating from the hale,' he said.
The Witch's Hut
The gingerbread embellished roof of the Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park on July 30 , 2025. (Katherine Dow)
'Gretel gave her a shove, causing her to fall in the oven'
Meanwhile, there has been one constant at the hut over the last 19 years in its ever-devoted volunteer.
After growing up blocks away from Kildonan Park, Zacharkiw went to work for the city in its arenas. The kids he saw every day, either inching shakily across the ice like Bambis on skates or zipping around with a hockey stick in hand, became the highlight.
He then moved on to work at the very park where he spent his childhood, tending to the machinery and working as a foreman.
He fell in love with the place, especially the Witch's Hut.
'I'm not a man of the world where I've seen lots of different things. From the building itself to the inside to the displays, - I like it all,' he said.
The Witch's Hut
The roof of the Witch's Hut peeks out above the shrubbery at Kildonan Park in Winnipeg, Man. on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
When it came time to retire, he worried there wouldn't be anyone around to care for the hut, so he volunteered to run it.
Every May for the past 19 years, he has opened its doors. He's there seven days a week, unless it's raining, as he worries kids would slip on the split-log staircase.
He closes up for the season in September.
A caretaker through and through, Zacharkiw has painted the fading coloured glass windows on the roof, created new gingerbread ornaments to hang inside, and greeted the many families who come to visit.
'I'm a big kid fan,' he said.
'It's fun to watch them come in and see the Witch. I just enjoy the reaction and the interaction with the kids.'
A bench outside bears his name – the city's recognition for his volunteer hours and dedication to the Witch's Hut.
The Witch's Hut
A bench dedicated to longtime volunteer Jim Zacharkiw sits outside the Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
'Hansel we are saved'
Over the years, the hut has played host to countless storybook hours, the Fairy Tales Festival, and plenty of photo shoots, as a favourite backdrop for shutterbugs, professional and aspiring.
A 2015 estimate had over 1,000 people visiting the hut weekly during the summer months, the city report said.
'I used to bring Tal (Bachman) here when he was about two years of age. Every day we rode here on our bikes,' Randy Bachman said in a 2021 Instagram video taken inside the Witch's Hut.
Standing next to him, son Tal takes the camera on a tour of the cottage, most of the figures covered by garbage bags as the facility was shut down at the time.
'I haven't been back since I was two or three years old. I still remember this place vividly,' Bachman said.
'Now all their cares were at an end, and they lived happily together'
Back on that hot July day, Bobby and his grandkids make their way back down the staircase. Having had their fill of the spooky Witch, they set off to feed the ducks that swim in the stream outside.
Zacharkiw waves goodbye to them, as more kids make their way inside, slightly hesitant to step into the story unfolding in front of them.
'It's been a bit smoky, so less busy, but they're starting to come now, which is good,' he said.
'It was built for kids but everyone loves coming.'
The Witch's Hut
The winding, split-wood staircase leading to the second floor of the Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park in Winnipeg, Man. on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
It's a sentiment echoed by scholar Donald Haase, Professor Greenhill tells me.
'Fairy tales are for everyone,' she said, paraphrasing him.
'We all make our own versions of fairy tales, sometimes from our recollections of fairy tales, and that is perfectly legitimate.'
The Witch's Hut
A terra cotta panel made by sculptor Elfriede Leopoldine Geier Berger shows the Witch visits a caged Hansel. The piece is on display at the Witch's Hut in Winnipeg's Kildonan Park on July 30, 2025. (Katherine Dow/CTV News Winnipeg)
Despite her harsh initial criticism, Jane came to love her father's version of the Witch's Hut and the legacy it left behind.
He passed away in 2008 of cancer. In his final days, he told Jane he would love her to recreate the design on a beach somewhere – her own summer abode.
The Witch's Hut
Jane Langes (centre) poses with friends at the Witch's Hut in Kildonan Park on Aug. 1, 2025. (Jane Langes)
'There are these edifices of my dad sort of sprinkled throughout the province that are still there, but the claim to fame is really the Witch's Hut,' she said.
'It's such a beautiful Winnipeg charm, and I think it brings a lot of happiness to a lot of people.'
- With files from CTV's Kayla Rosen
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
12 minutes ago
- CTV News
Camper ‘singing his heart out' triggers search and rescue response in B.C.
Central Okanagan Search and Rescue shared this photo, along with a story about a unique call the team responded to. A solo camper belting out a plaintive tune was mistaken for someone in distress, prompting a full search and rescue response – including police and a drone team, in B.C.'s Okanagan last week. Volunteers with Central Okanagan Search and Rescue were in the midst of their weekly training session last Thursday when they were deployed to the Boulderfields, a popular hiking and climbing destination near Kelowna. 'Two concerned hikers called 911 after hearing repeated cries,' a social media post from COSAR said, describing what triggered the operation. 'We responded with a full contingent of members, two RCMP officers, and our drone team. Early responders even heard faint yelling—but couldn't make out what was being said.' The team, along with two Mounties, started combing the area on foot while a drone team searched from above. 'Then we found him: a lone camper, singing his heart out to the trees, blissfully unaware that the acoustics of the Boulderfields had turned his tent-side concert into an accidental distress signal,' the poste continued. 'He wasn't in trouble. Unless you count his singing.' Even though no one was in need of rescuing, the team said they appreciated the people who made the 911 call for trying to help when they thought someone was in need. They also took the opportunity to remind the public that search and rescue services are always free and available to all.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
JFK assassination movie seen through the lens of an Italian-American mob wraps filming in Winnipeg
Nicholas Celozzi has spent much of his life revisiting the events leading up to the assassination of former U.S. president John F. Kennedy. Hushed stories filled his childhood home. Conversations with his uncle Joseph [Pepe] Giancana, brother to Chicago Mob boss Sam Giancana, later helped shed light on his family's possible involvement in one of the most debated moments in American history. After decades of film and television portrayals of Sam Giancana, Celozzi is reconceptualizing the 1963 shooting of Kennedy with a focus on the major players in the Chicago Outfit, a powerful Italian-American criminal organization. For Celozzi, his latest screenwriting endeavour is about more than telling another assassination story. It's about family. "My family, my cousins, really got tired of people using our name, monetizing our name and telling a fake story," Celozzi said in an interview. "These aren't fictional people ... they're real people. They're vulnerable, they have nerves, they make mistakes, they are not quite sure about things." Sam Giancana, head of the Chicago Outfit in the 1950s and 1960s, was widely known for his ties to the Kennedy family. He was gunned down in his home in 1975, and his killing remains unsolved. Many have speculated the mob group also played a role in Kennedy's assassination, and this is explored in Celozzi's November 1963, which began filming in Winnipeg this summer. Relying on Pepe Giancana's stories, Celozzi focuses on the 48 hours leading up to the assassination. Giancana, a fill-in driver for his brother, had been a fly on the wall in the days leading up to the assassination, said Celozzi, who is also one of the producers on the independent film. Many conversations led to what Celozzi calls the "Pepe chronicles," a series of stories detailing the family's Mob ties. "I was always aware of who they were. These aren't things that everybody just kind of goes home and talks about. It's an awareness. It's kind of a strange reality that you're born into," said Celozzi. Pepe Giancana died in the mid-'90s, leaving his stories with Celozzi. Drive for honesty The writer said he knew he wanted to do something to honour his family's history without degrading them to caricatures often found in Mob flicks. So he began working with Sam Giancana's daughter Bonnie Giancana to craft the script. Over the course of several years and rewrites, Celozzi said they worked to ensure every detail was accurate. "I needed to keep that honest with the story Pepe gave me, or why do it at all? If I wasn't going to be truthful to what he gave me, there was no purpose in me doing it," said Celozzi. He brought veteran Canadian producer Kevin DeWalt of Minds Eye Entertainment on board to produce the movie, which wrapped shooting in Winnipeg last week and goes into post-production in Saskatchewan. "I don't think the family's proud of what happened ... it was important for them to tell the truth before they die," DeWalt said. The cast includes John Travolta, Dermot Mulroney and Mandy Patinkin and is directed by Academy Award nominated English filmmaker Roland Joffe. When it came time to pick a location that could mimic 1960s Chicago and the landmark Dealey Plaza in Dallas, where Kennedy was killed, producers chose Winnipeg over other major cities such as Atlanta and New Orleans in part because of its Exchange District neighbourhood. Producers decided Winnipeg was a perfect stand-in for the Windy City. Dealey Plaza, and the famous Grassy Knoll, was built from scratch at Birds Hill Provincial Park, northeast of Winnipeg. The film features 1,500 extras and 75 to 80 period cars to accurately portray the time period. DeWalt said he expects viewers will be blown away by the film's ability to bring a new level of authenticity and validity to the moment in history. "People will walk out of the theatre with their own impressions about what it all means," he said. "At the end of the day, at least we've given them the tools for one of these things that's been told, and they can make their own impressions in terms of how they feel about it." When asked if he thinks the film might ruffle feathers with historians, governments or Mob members, Celozzi said that's not his goal.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
‘They're real people': Mob focus of JFK assassination flick filmed in Winnipeg
A film crew works on the set of "November 1963" in Winnipeg in this undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Allen Fraser/November 1963 (Mandatory Credit) WINNIPEG — Nicholas Celozzi has spent much of his life revisiting the events leading up to the assassination of former U.S. president John F. Kennedy. Hushed stories filled his childhood home. Conversations with his uncle Joseph (Pepe) Giancana, brother to Chicago Mob boss Sam Giancana, later helped shed light on his family's possible involvement in one of the most debated moments in American history. After decades of film and television portrayals of Sam Giancana, Celozzi is reconceptualizing the 1963 shooting of Kennedy with a focus on the major players in the Chicago Outfit, a powerful Italian-American criminal organization. For Celozzi, his latest screenwriting endeavour is about more than telling another assassination story. It's about family. 'My family, my cousins, really got tired of people using our name, monetizing our name and telling a fake story,' Celozzi said in an interview. 'These aren't fictional people ... they're real people. They're vulnerable, they have nerves, they make mistakes, they are not quite sure about things.' Sam Giancana, head of the Chicago Outfit in the 1950s and 1960s, was widely known for his ties to the Kennedy family. He was gunned down in his home in 1975, and his killing remains unsolved. Many have speculated the Mob group also played a role in Kennedy's assassination, and this is explored in Celozzi's 'November 1963,' which began filming in Winnipeg this summer. Relying on Pepe Giancana's stories, Celozzi focuses on the 48 hours leading up to the assassination. Giancana, a fill-in driver for his brother, had been a fly on the wall in the days leading up to the assassination, said Celozzi, who is also one of the producers on the independent film. Many conversations led to what Celozzi calls the 'Pepe chronicles,' a series of stories detailing the family's Mob ties. 'I was always aware of who they were. These aren't things that everybody just kind of goes home and talks about. It's an awareness. It's kind of a strange reality that you're born into,' said Celozzi. Pepe Giancana died in the mid-'90s, leaving his stories with Celozzi. The writer said he knew he wanted to do something to honour his family's history without degrading them to caricatures often found in Mob flicks. So he began working with Sam Giancana's daughter Bonnie Giancana to craft the script. Over the course of several years and rewrites, Celozzi said they worked to ensure every detail was accurate. 'I needed to keep that honest with the story Pepe gave me, or why do it at all? If I wasn't going to be truthful to what he gave me, there was no purpose in me doing it,' said Celozzi. He brought veteran Canadian producer Kevin DeWalt of Minds Eye Entertainment on board to produce the movie, which wrapped shooting in Winnipeg last week and goes into post-production in Saskatchewan. 'I don't think the family's proud of what happened ... it was important for them to tell the truth before they die,' DeWalt said. The cast includes John Travolta, Dermot Mulroney and Mandy Patinkin and is directed by Academy Award nominated English filmmaker Roland Joffé. When it came time to pick a location that could mimic 1960s Chicago and the landmark Dealey Plaza in Dallas, where Kennedy was killed, producers chose Winnipeg over other major cities such as Atlanta and New Orleans in part because of its Exchange District neighbourhood. Producers decided Winnipeg was a perfect stand-in for the Windy City. Dealey Plaza, and the famous Grassy Knoll, was built from scratch at Birds Hill Provincial Park, northeast of Winnipeg. The film features 1,500 extras and 75 to 80 period cars to accurately portray the time period. DeWalt said he expects viewers will be blown away by the film's ability to bring a new level of authenticity and validity to the moment in history. 'People will walk out of the theatre with their own impressions about what it all means,' he said. 'At the end of the day, at least we've given them the tools for one of these things that's been told, and they can make their own impressions in terms of how they feel about it.' When asked if he thinks the film might ruffle feathers with historians, governments or Mob members, Celozzi said that's not his goal. 'What I'm doing is just putting in that missing piece, not glamorizing, just writing it.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 3, 2025. Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press