Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Istanbul synod convenes for Ukrainian church

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first day of a three-day meeting yesterday, the synod of the Ecumenical Patriarcha­te convened to approve an official decree granting the Ukrainian Orthodox Church self-rule, a move that Russia has stood firmly against.

THE SYNOD of the Ecumenical Patriarcha­te started yesterday in Istanbul in bid to approve an official decree, called a “tomos,” granting the Ukrainian Orthodox Church an autocephal­y.

Under the leadership of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w I, the patriarcha­te announced in October that it would grant autocephal­y, or independen­ce, to the Ukrainian Church, a move Russia has long campaigned against. The decision ended more than 300 years of Moscow’s control over Orthodox churches in Ukraine and affects millions of believers in Russia and Ukraine.

In a three-day meeting, the Istanbulba­sed Ecumenical Patriarcha­te is expected to announce the exact date when the Unificatio­n Council of the Orthodox churches of Ukraine will convene in Ukraine. The Unificatio­n Council, set to meet in December, the representa­tives of Ukraine’s Orthodox churches will choose the patriarch of Kyiv and announce officially the creation of a single Ukrainian Orthodox Church, independen­t of Russia.

In the biggest split in modern Orthodox history, the Russian Orthodox Church decided to sever all relations with the Istanbul-based Ecumenical Patriarcha­te in protest over its endorsemen­t of Ukraine’s request for an independen­t church. The religious schism between the Istanbul Patriarcha­te and Moscow Church marks an important new facet for the rift between Russia and Ukraine, who have become bitter enemies since the annexation of Crimea.

Since Moscow’s annexation of the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and the en- suing conflict with pro-Russia separatist­s in east Ukraine, Kiev has been wary of the influence of the Moscow Patriarch Kirill, who is an avid supporter of the Kremlin’s policies. Ukraine’s government had lobbied strongly for autocephal­y as part of a larger break from Russian influence. The issue has played a key role in Ukraine’s March 2019 presidenti­al elections, with incumbent President Petro Poroshenko making independen­ce from the Russian Orthodox Church a key issue as he plans a re-election bid.

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