Malta Independent

Birth of a new Ukrainian church brings fears of violence

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The rough-looking young men brought clubs and brass knuckles to the Pechersk Monastery in Kiev , one of Orthodox Christiani­ty’s most important pilgrimage sites, apparently seeking to disrupt worship. Police spread-eagled them against a wall decorated in faded centuries-old frescos of solemn saints, then hauled them away.

On the other side of the dispute, at a small church in the center of Kiev, a dozen men organized round-the-clock guard duty, worried that nationalis­t radicals might make their third attempt in a year to seize the place of worship.

The incidents a week ago underline the tensions in Ukraine as it prepares to establish a fullfledge­d Orthodox church of its own. The planned religious rupture from the Russian Orthodox Church is a potent — possibly explosive — mix of politics, religious faith and national identity.

The imminent creation of the new Ukrainian church raises deep concerns about what will happen to the approximat­ely 12,000 churches in Ukraine that are now under the Moscow Patriarcha­te.

“The question of what will happen to the property of the Orthodox churches existing in Ukraine after the emergence of a single local church is key and could be one of the most painful” issues of the Orthodox split, said Volodymyr Fesenko, an analyst at the Ukrainian think-tank Penta.

Since the late 1600s, the Orthodox Church in Ukraine had been a wing of the Russian Orthodox Church rather than ecclesiast­ically independen­t — or “autocephal­ous.” Many Ukrainians chafed at that arrangemen­t, resenting its implicatio­n that Ukraine was a vassal state of Russia.

Schismatic churches formed under their own Ukrainian leaders, but they were not recognized as canonical by the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantin­ople, the so-called “first among equals” of leaders of the world’s Orthodox Churches.

That is about to change.

The Istanbul-based patriarcha­te last week removed an anathema against Ukrainian church leaders, a major step toward granting full recognitio­n to a Ukrainian church that does not answer to the Moscow Patriarcha­te.

The Russian Orthodox Church, furious at the move, announced it would no longer recognize the authority of the Ecumenical Patriarch. It also fears it will lose deeply cherished sites including the Pechersk Monastery, the seat of the church’s Ukrainian branch and a major tourist destinatio­n renowned for its richly decorated churches and labyrinthi­ne caves holding the relics of holy men.

It’s not exactly clear when the autocephal­y will be formally granted. The two schismatic Ukrainian churches must meet to decide who will be the patriarch of the unified church. Once that decision is made, Constantin­ople is expected to grant the independen­ce order.

In recent years, about 50 churches in Ukraine that were under the Moscow Patriarcha­te

have been forcibly seized and transferre­d to the Kiev Patriarcha­te, according to Metropolit­an Antony Pakanich of the Moscowloya­l Ukrainian Church.

“People have been forcibly dragged out of our temples, the locks have been sawed off,” he told The Associated Press. “People in camouflage and balaclavas, with insignia of radical organizati­ons, have come and beat our believers and priests.”

Some believers say they will forcefully defend their right to stay.

“The creation of a local church will push for a new round of confrontat­ion ... we, who are supporters of canonical Orthodoxy, will defend our interests here,” said Ilya Bogoslovsk­y, a 28-yearold who came with his wife and daughter for a service at the chapel of the Tithes Monastery, where the guards had been deployed.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, who has hailed the creation of the full Ukrainian church as “a guarantee of our spiritual freedom,” has pledged that there will be no action taken against parishes that choose to remain under the Moscow Patriarcha­te.

Similar promises have come from Patriarch Filaret, head of the largest of the schismatic Ukrainian Orthodox churches, who said “creating a single Orthodox Church in Ukraine does not mean that the Russian Orthodox Church does not have the right to exist on our territory.”

But some Ukrainian nationalis­ts appear ready to use force. In September, radical right-wingers broke into a church in western Ukraine, beat up a priest, drove parishione­rs away and locked the building.

A leader of the ultranatio­nalist C14 group, whose adherents have twice attacked the Tithes church in Kiev, sees the presence of Moscow Patriarcha­te churches in Ukraine as a form of propaganda by an “aggressor country” since the Russian Orthodox Church has close ties with the Kremlin.

The Tithes church is “the Kremlin’s political tool,” Serhiy Mazur said.

The war between Ukrainian government forces and Russiaback­ed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine, which began in 2014 and has killed at least 10,000 people, has also sharply increased the hostility toward the Moscow Patriarcha­te churches.

Father Sergii Dmitriev, a chaplain in the Ukrainian army, was once part of the Moscow church but switched to the Kiev Patriarcha­te after the Russia-linked church began to refuse holding funerals for Ukrainian soldiers killed in the war.

“To be in the Moscow Patriarcha­te is to take part in the murder of Ukrainians,” he told the AP. “Not only those who pull the trigger are responsibl­e, but those who bless the pulling of the trigger.”

With such passions on both sides, the cleric feared that more violence between the two uneasy neighbors lay ahead.

“The birth of a new Ukrainian church is taking place amid throes for which everyone should be prepared,” he warned.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A bighorn sheep at the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona. State wildlife officials say an effort to reintroduc­e bighorn sheep between 2013 and 2016 in the Tucson area is paying off. The Arizona Game and Fish Department says the population of the animals in the Santa Catalina Mountains has stabilized and hikers are spotting more of them.
Photograph: AP A bighorn sheep at the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona. State wildlife officials say an effort to reintroduc­e bighorn sheep between 2013 and 2016 in the Tucson area is paying off. The Arizona Game and Fish Department says the population of the animals in the Santa Catalina Mountains has stabilized and hikers are spotting more of them.
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