Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ukraine Orthodox leaders approve a break with the Russian church.

Decision to depart Moscow Patriarcha­te could raise tensions

- By Yuras Karmanau and Efrem Lukatsky

KIEV, Ukraine — Ukrainian Orthodox leaders on Saturday approved the creation of a unified church independen­t of the Moscow Patriarcha­te and elected a leader to head that new church — a move that could exponentia­lly raise tensions with neighborin­g Russia.

The vote, held at a closed-door synod in Kiev’s St. Sophia Cathedral, is the latest in a series of confrontat­ions between Ukraine and authoritie­s in Russia, including President Vladimir Putin’s government. Ahead of the vote, the Russian Orthodox Church called on the United Nations, the leaders of Germany and France, the pope and other spiritual leaders to protect Orthodox believers in Ukraine.

The leader of the new autocephal­ous Ukrainian Orthodox Church will be Metropolit­an Epiphanius, a 39-year-old bishop from the Kiev Patriarcha­te.

“God heard our appeals and gave us this anticipate­d unity,” Epiphanius told a crowd of thousands who had gathered outside the cathedral on Saturday to hear the news. He stressed that the new church’s doors would be open to all, and encouraged Ukrainians to rally behind it.

Still spiritual leaders attending Saturday’s synod couched their efforts to create an independen­t church in patriotic rhetoric. Father Sergei Dmitriev said — given Ukraine’s ongoing conflicts with Russia — “we should have our own church, not an agent of the Kremlin in Ukraine.”

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, who has made the creation of a new church a key campaign issue, attended the synod Saturday as a non-voting observer.

“Ukraine was not, is not, and will not be the canonical territory of the Russian church,” Poroshenko told the gathering, adding that creating an independen­t Ukrainian Orthodox Church was now a matter of national security.

“This is a question of Ukrainian statehood,” Poroshenko said. “We are seizing spiritual independen­ce, which can be likened to political independen­ce. We are breaking the chains that tie us to the (Russian) empire.”

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