Cyprus Today

Ukraine wins approval for split from Russian church

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UKRAINE secured approval on Thursday to establish an independen­t church in what Kiev says is a vital step against Russian meddling in its affairs, but the Russian clergy fiercely opposes the biggest split in Christiani­ty for a thousand years.

At a three-day synod presided over by the Ecumenical Patriarch in İstanbul, seat of the global spiritual leader of roughly 300 million Orthodox Christians, endorsed Ukraine’s request for an “autocephal­ous” [independen­t] church.

The synod will “proceed to the granting of Autocephal­y to the Church of Ukraine,” a statement said.

The synod took several decisions to pave the way for Ukraine to set up its church, including rehabilita­ting Ukrainian Patriarch Filaret excommunic­ated by the Russian Orthodox Church for leading a breakaway church in the early 1990s.

In retaliatio­n, the Russian Orthodox Church said it would break eucharisti­cal relations with the Ecumenical Patriarcha­te, Interfax news agency quoted a spokesman as saying.

The tussle over Ukraine’s spiritual future flows from the poisoning of relations between Kiev and Moscow after Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the outbreak of separatist fighting in Ukraine’s east that has killed over 10,000 people.

Ukraine accuses the Russian Orthodox Church of wielding a pernicious influence on its soil, allowing itself to be used as a tool of the Kremlin to justify Russian expansioni­sm and support of separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Ukraine’s victory on the church issue could bolster pro-Western President Petro Poroshenko’s campaign in what is expected to be a tight election race next year.

“The decisions of the Ecumenical Patriarch and Synod finally dispelled the imperial illusions and chauvinist­ic fantasies of Moscow,” Mr Poroshenko said. “It is a question of our independen­ce, national security, statehood, a question of world geopolitic­s.”

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