San Diego Union-Tribune

SOME UKRAINIANS MOVE UP CHRISTMAS TO PART WAYS WITH RUSSIA

Holiday celebrated on Dec. 25 instead of Jan. 7 for 1st time

- BY RENATA BRITO & HANNA ARHIROVA Brito and Arhirova write for The Associated Press.

Ukrainians usually celebrate Christmas on Jan. 7, as do the Russians. But not this year, or at least not all of them.

Some Orthodox Ukrainians decided to observe Christmas on Dec. 25, like many Christians around the world. Yes, this has to do with the war, and yes, they have the blessing of their local church.

The idea of commemorat­ing the birth of Jesus in December was considered radical in Ukraine until recently, but Russia’s invasion changed many hearts and minds.

In October, the leadership of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which is not aligned with the Russian church and one of two branches of Orthodox Christiani­ty in the country, agreed to allow faithful to celebrate on Dec. 25.

The choice of dates has clear political and religious overtones in a nation with rival Orthodox churches and where slight revisions to rituals can carry potent meaning in a culture war that runs parallel to the shooting war.

For some people, changing dates represents a separation from Russia, its culture, and religion. People in a village on the outskirts of Kyiv voted recently to move up their Christmas observance.

“What began on Feb. 24, the full-scale invasion, is an awakening and an understand­ing that we can no longer be part of the Russian world,” Olena Paliy, a 33year-old Bobrytsia resident, said.

The Russian Orthodox Church, which claims sovereignt­y over Orthodoxy in Ukraine, and some other Eastern Orthodox churches continue to use the ancient Julian calendar. Christmas falls 13 days later on that calendar, or Jan. 7, than it does on the Gregorian calendar used by most church and secular groups.

The Catholic Church first adopted the modern, more astronomic­ally precise Gregorian calendar in the 16th century, and Protestant­s and some Orthodox churches have since aligned their own calendars for purposes of calculatin­g Christmas.

The Synod of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine decreed in October that local church rectors could choose the date along with their communitie­s, saying the decision followed years of discussion but also resulted from the circumstan­ces of the war.

In Bobrytsia, some members of the faith promoted the change within the local church, which recently transition­ed to being part of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, with no ties to Russia. When a vote was taken last week, 200 out of 204 people said yes to adopting Dec. 25 as the new day to celebrate Christmas.

“This is a big step because never in our history have we had the same dates of celebratio­n of Christmas in Ukraine with the whole Christian world. All the time we were separated,” said Roman Ivanenko, a local official in Bobrytsia, and one of the promoters of the change. With the switch, he said, they are “breaking this connection” with the Russians.

As in all the Kyiv region, Sunday morning in Bobrytsia began with the sound of sirens, but that didn’t prevent people from gathering in the church to attend a Christmas Mass on Dec. 25 for the first time. In the end, there were no attacks reported in the capital.

“No enemy can take away the holiday because the holiday is born in the soul,” the Rev. Rostyslav Korchak said in his homily, during which he used the words “war,” “soldiers,” and “evil” more than “Jesus Christ.”

Anna Nezenko, 65, has attended the church in Bobrytsia on every Christmas since the building was inaugurate­d in 2000, although always on Jan. 7th. She said she did not feel strange doing so Sunday.

“The most important is the God to be born in the heart,” she said.

In 2019, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w, the spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church, granted complete independen­ce, or autocephal­y, to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. Ukrainians who favored recognitio­n for a national church in tandem with Ukraine’s political independen­ce from the former Soviet Union had long sought such approval.

The Russian Orthodox Church and its leader, Patriarch Kirill, fiercely protested the move, saying Ukraine was not under the jurisdicti­on of Bartholome­w.

The other major branch of Orthodoxy in the country, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, remained loyal to Moscow until the outbreak of war. It declared independen­ce in May, though it remains under government scrutiny. That church has traditiona­lly celebrated Christmas on Jan. 7.

 ?? FELIPE DANA AP ?? Ukrainians attend a Christmas Mass at an Orthodox Church in Bobrytsia, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday. Orthodox Ukrainians celebrated Christmas in December instead of January for the first time.
FELIPE DANA AP Ukrainians attend a Christmas Mass at an Orthodox Church in Bobrytsia, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday. Orthodox Ukrainians celebrated Christmas in December instead of January for the first time.

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