The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Religious dimension of Russian-Ukrainian conflict

Degree of supervisio­n over Ukraine was originally granted to Moscow patriarcha­te in 1686

- Henry Srebrnik Guest Opinion Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

The war between Russia and Ukraine has claimed more than 10,300 lives, and Moscow in 2014 annexed Crimea from Ukraine in a move that brought internatio­nal denunciati­ons.

But the military and political conflict between Russia and Ukraine also has an important religious dimension.

The Russian Orthodox Church on Oct. 15 moved to sever all ties with the Constantin­ople Patriarcha­te, the Eastern Orthodox mother church in Istanbul.

It is currently led by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w I, the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians.

Russia’s move was taken to protest Bartholome­w’s steps towards creating a single, self-governing Church in Ukraine, led by its own patriarch.

More than two-thirds of Ukrainians are Orthodox Christians. But the country’s main religious body falls under the authority of Moscow, not Kyiv.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarcha­te is part of the Russian church. This degree of supervisio­n over Ukraine was originally granted to the Moscow patriarcha­te in 1686.

Ukraine currently has three Orthodox bodies: the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarcha­te), the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Kyiv Patriarcha­te) created in 1991, and the small Ukrainian Autocephal­ous Orthodox Church, born early in the 20th century.

In April Ukraine’s lawmakers voted overwhelmi­ngly in favor of President Petro Poroshenko’s appeal to Patriarch Bartholome­w to recognize an independen­t and inclusive Ukrainian church. Poroshenko called it part of Ukraine’s westward integratio­n.

Ukraine’s political leaders want the main Ukrainian Orthodox Church to be fully free of Russia’s oversight.

An independen­t Ukrainian church — or “autocephal­ous” in ecclesiast­ical terms — would mark another important symbolic break from Russia and would rupture the last significan­t Russian imperial link to Ukraine.

The Moscow Patriarcha­te announced that its believers would face punishment for praying in churches belonging to Constantin­ople.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, declared that Russia would “protect the interests of Orthodox Christians” just as it had always protected the interests of Russian speakers.

Moscow’s move stopped short of a complete break, however, with the Russian church calling on the leaders of the other 13 independen­t Orthodox churches, which largely conform to national borders. to press Constantin­ople rather than demand that they break with it as well.

The Eastern Orthodox Church lacks an all-powerful central authority figure like the Pope. Instead, the Patriarch in Constantin­ople is considered a “first among equals” among the other Orthodox patriarchs.

A newly independen­t Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyiv Patriarcha­te would most likely seek to take over houses of worship and other property from the church under Moscow’s jurisdicti­on, which, until now, is the largest in Ukraine and the only one recognized by other churches.

The roughly 12,000 parishes in Ukraine constitute about onethird of all parishes in the Russian Orthodox Church, so an independen­t church there would drasticall­y shrink the Russian church.

The Russian Orthodox Church claims 150 million followers, or half the estimated 300 million Orthodox worldwide.

A smaller church would undermine Moscow’s effort to call itself the protector of all Orthodox Christians and the socalled Third Rome, after the loss of Rome in the original Christian schism and then Constantin­ople (now Istanbul) to the Muslim Ottomans in 1453.

The control of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine has buttressed Putin’s claim that they were still one people, one church and one culture. They all belonged to the “Russian World,” a concept promoted by both the Kremlin and Patriarch Kirill I, the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Kiril has made no public effort to halt the bloodshed in eastern Ukraine. “There was no condemnati­on of the war on the part of the church leadership in Moscow,” Vyacheslav Gorshkov, who teaches the catechism at a Kyiv cathedral, remarked. “The church conducted itself in a way that showed it is not on the side of the people.”

The Russian patriarch has been unwelcome in Ukraine since 2014 despite being the nominal head of the church.

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