The Morning Call

Ukrainian Catholic Church to cover Nazi monument outside Philadelph­ia

- By William Bender and Ryan W. Briggs

The leader of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in the Philadelph­ia region said Tuesday that the church would temporaril­y cover a 30-yearold cemetery monument in Montgomery County that is dedicated to a unit of Ukrainian soldiers who fought for Nazi Germany during World War II.

The decision comes about a week after an Inquirer article described the history of the monument at St. Mary’s Ukrainian Catholic Cemetery in Elkins Park. The large stone cross honors the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the Schutzstaf­fel — the Nazi military branch often referred to simply as “the SS.”

It was erected in the mid 1990s, but apparently had received little attention until recently. Jewish groups over the last week have condemned the monument and called for its removal.

Borys Gudziak, the archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparch­y of Philadelph­ia, said in a statement Tuesday that the church decided to “temporaril­y cover the monument in question while our discussion­s ensue with the community in order to prevent vandalism and with the goal of conducting an objective dialogue with sensitivit­y to all concerned.”

The SS unit, known also as the “1st Galician” or “SS Galizien,” was formed in 1943, and composed of volunteers and conscripts from Nazi-occupied Ukraine. Some Ukrainians today view those soldiers not as Nazi collaborat­ors but “freedom fighters” who took on the Soviet Union with the goal of establishi­ng Ukrainian independen­ce.

The cemetery is owned by the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, which functions as the primary church for the archeparch­y. Veterans associatio­n records indicate that the church apparently approved the memorial, donated land for its creation, and dispatched clergy to consecrate the monument about 30 years ago.

A church official recently disputed that account, saying the cemetery monuments “are not subject to the approval of the archeparch­y.”

Jewish groups and some historians say that honoring SS Galizien today risks whitewashi­ng the war crimes of the Nazi regime and its collaborat­ors.

Last week, the American Jewish Committee said in a statement that area Ukrainians must “recognize that this cannot remain.”

“We urge them to act in the same spirit that motivated Ukrainian President Zelensky to correct these historical myths at home and remove this memorial stone from our community,” the statement said.

Zelensky, who is Jewish, has condemned marchers who celebrated the unit during a 2021 parade in Kyiv.

The Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelph­ia and the Anti-Defamation League said they were shocked to learn of the monument, which is next to an elementary school and in a community that is also home to more than a half dozen synagogues.

The stone cross, which features the lion-and-crowns insignia of SS Galizien, had apparently received little scrutiny until this year, when a leader of a far-right Ukrainian nationalis­t group visited the cemetery to pose before it. The Forward,

a Jewish newspaper that has tracked monuments to Nazi collaborat­ors, wrote an article about the monument last month.

In a statement last week, before Tuesday’s decision to cover the monument, Gudziak acknowledg­ed that recent news stories had “alarmed and hurt the Jewish community of Philadelph­ia.”

But, Gudziak added: “[T]hey have evoked concern among the Ukrainians in the area. The pain in our communitie­s reflects the tragic and traumatic history of the twentieth century — a century when millions were brutally slaughtere­d by totalitari­an regimes.”

“The Ukrainian Catholic Archeparch­y of Philadelph­ia values its relationsh­ip with the Jewish community and intends to address the issues at hand with the depth and seriousnes­s that they deserve,” Gudziak wrote. “Therefore, we plan to engage in an open, scholarly, and compassion­ate dialogue with the organizati­ons that have contacted us regarding this matter in order to find an acceptable solution.”

It was unclear Tuesday how the church intends to cover the memorial, or for how long.

 ?? YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? The monument at St. Mary’s Ukrainian Catholic Cemetery in Elkins Park honors the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS. The church decided this week to cover it amid new attention to its presence outside Philadelph­ia.
YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER The monument at St. Mary’s Ukrainian Catholic Cemetery in Elkins Park honors the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS. The church decided this week to cover it amid new attention to its presence outside Philadelph­ia.

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