Tuesday, December 06, 2022

The Russian Orthodox Church, Complicit in War

 

"We have to create conditions where no actors dependent on the aggressor state [Russia] will have an opportunity to manipulate Ukrainians and weaken Ukraine from within."
"We will never allow anyone to build an empire inside the Ukrainian soul."
"[Government officials are ordered to] ensure the religious examination of the Management Statute of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church for the presence of a church-canonical connection with the Moscow Patriarchate and, if necessary, to take measures provided for by law."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy 

"[Leaders of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church declare] full independence [from Russia, and that its council had] approved the corresponding additions and changes to the Statute on the Management of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, indicating the full autonomy and independence of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church."
Leadership statement, May 2022
Ukrainian law enforcement officers inspect one of churches of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery in Kyiv
Ukrainian law enforcement officers inspect one of churches of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine November 22, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Musiienko
 
Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople in his role as spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians worldwide, gave permission in 2019 to Ukraine to form a church that would be independent of Moscow. This led to a split in the Orthodox community within Ukraine. Those mostly in eastern Ukraine who wanted to remain loyal to Moscow split from the larger group throughout the country that opted to be independent of the Russian Orthodox Church. And while the Ukrainian Orthodox Church maintained its links to Russia, the breakaway Orthodox Church of Ukraine did not. 

Early in the 'special military operation' that Putin describes the Russian invasion of Ukraine as, Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church with whom Vladimir Putin has a close association, fully endorsed Putin's invasion of Ukraine. He might have remained neutral, he might gently have chastised the Russian President for waging a brutal war on a neighbour with whom religious devotion is shared along with a common history (of historic Russian aggression against Ukraine, including the Holodomor) but he chose to give his full support.

This has led to suspicion against the Ukrainian Orthodox Church's role in supporting the Russian invasion.More than that, the suspicion that the church and some of its clerics could be playing an active role in passing critical information along to the Kremlin about internal matters concerning Ukraine. Ukraine's security service raided Orthodox monasteries located in several cities in a search for Russian spies and concealed weapons.
 
UKRAINE WAR ECUMENISM
Kirill and Putin, in perfect accord   Reuters
 
The Pecherak Lavra in Kyiv, a thousand-year-old monastic community spoken of as the cradle of the Russian and Ukrainian Orthodox churches was searched by the SEU to prevent the use of the Lavra as a centre of the 'Russian world'.": The search was undertaken to "protect the population from provocations and terrorist acts" and to investigate allegations that church property was being used "to hide sabotage and intelligence groups, foreign citizens, and to store weapons".

The Koretsky Holy Trinity monastery and the Sarny-Polissia Eparchy in Rivne, western Ukraine, were also raided. Armed men in camouflage were shown in footage interviewing cassocked priests. All three of these monasteries are affiliated with the Moscow Patriarchate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, a branch against which allegations of of collaboration with Russia has been detected since the war began.

In November Basyl Malynuk, head of he SBU, spoke of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine as "perfect ground for the functioning of an enemy human intelligence network", stating that 33 priests suspected of gathering information or acting as spotters for Russian artillery had been detained since February.  This has been construed as an "act of intimidation" by the Russian Orthodox Church.

"Like many other cases of persecution of believers in Ukraine since 2014 (when Luhansk and Donetsk ethnic-Russian Ukrainian rebels declared those provinces detached from Ukraine and allied with Russia, and Moscow annexed the coveted Crimean peninsula), this act of intimidation is almost certain to go unnoticed by those who call themselves the international human rights community", stated Vladimir Legoida, spokesman for the church.

Abbot of the Pechersk monastery, Metropolitan Pavlo, strenuously denied charges that he had prayed for Russia -- in the wake of footage emerging of people within the monastery singing a pro-Moscow song.

Ukrainian law enforcement officers stand next to an entrance to the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery compound, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Nov. 22, 2022.
 

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