Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Amid shelling, monastery is loyal to Moscow

Monks and nuns are absorbing Russian artillery strikes daily

- By Andrew E. Kramer

SVIATOHIRS­K, Ukraine — Of the hundreds of battle sites across Ukraine, the Sviatohirs­k Monastery of the Caves surely ranks among the most incongruou­s.

The sprawling complex of onion-domed churches built into a high bank of the Siversky Donets River is considered one of the five holiest sites in the Russian Orthodox Church. Yet it is in the line of fire of the Russian army in its advance in eastern Ukraine.

Russian shells aimed at Ukrainian troop positions regularly go astray and strike the monastery, with metallic booms that echo through the churchyard­s. They tear through building walls and leave gaping holes in the grounds. At least four monks, priests or nuns have been killed, Ukrainian police say.

The shelling is another example of the collateral damage the Russians are inflicting with errant or indiscrimi­nate artillery strikes. And it has forced the monks and nuns cloistered here into a form of wartime rationaliz­ation.

Along with many of the hundreds of displaced people who sought safety in the complex, they are faithful in the Russian church and loyal to its leader in Moscow, Patriarch Kirill, who has blessed the Russian invasion. But the constant bombardmen­t presents a contradict­ion they are forced to reconcile.

“Yes, they shell the monastery but they are probably just following orders,” one nun, Sister Ioanna, said of the Russian soldiers. “We pray for them, too, asking that they realize what they are doing.”

Sister Ioanna was praying

in the corridor of a monastery building one morning when a shell struck, causing a wall to explode.

A brick hit her in the head, she said later in an interview in a hospital. A monk beside her was struck with shrapnel in his stomach and died before he could be evacuated, Sister Ioanna said.

During a recent visit to the monastery, shells striking the grounds threw up columns of dirt and smoke, followed a few seconds later by the pattering noise of debris falling down on the church domes. Monks ran for cover, their black robes flapping.

Those who did not survive earlier barrages are now buried in a courtyard.

Around the site, the whitewashe­d walls are pocked from shrapnel, windows are blown out. Holes blown in walls and craters in the churchyard­s attest to direct hits.

Inside the buildings,

the basement walls are festooned with Orthodox icons. The people huddling there crossed themselves with each shuddering thud outside. Many had come seeking shelter from shelling in their own villages.

“I feel God will protect me here,” said Volodymyr Slipuchenk­o.

But as the booms echoed, Slipuchenk­o added hesitantly, “I don’t know if it’s really safe.”

Last weekend, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that about 300 civilians, including about 60 children, were sheltering in the monastery. Regional police say they cannot evacuate the children because the access road is regularly shelled.

The destructio­n at the site is likely to reverberat­e in Orthodox Christian politics.

The post-Soviet schism of the Russian and Ukrainian churches has been a religious backdrop to the

war. Ukraine’s church has asserted independen­ce but thousands of parishes in Ukraine remain loyal to Kirill, the Patriarch in Moscow. If Ukraine wins, the Russian church will almost certainly be expelled for good.

In the meantime, many Russian Orthodox parishes in Ukraine, as well as around the world, have rejected any alliance with Kirill, a political ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

But not the monks in the Sviatohirs­k monastery; they remain aligned with Russia. Indeed, this has been seen for years as the most Russian-oriented of the major religious sites in Ukraine.

“They justify themselves and try to avoid facing the reality, which is that Russia invaded Ukraine” and is striking their monastery, said Ihor Kozlovsky, a theologian and authority on Orthodox churches in

Ukraine.

Russian artillery appears to be targeting a bridge over the Siversky Donets River — only 15 to 20 yards from the wall of the monastery — and Ukrainian positions nearby. But predictabl­y with unguided projectile­s, there are wayward shots that hit the monastery instead.

Ukrainian officials accuse Russian forces of being reckless and careless in their shelling.

“Nothing is sacred for them,” Anton Gerashchen­ko, a deputy minister of the interior, said of the destructio­n of the monastery. “They could go around, but they decided to shoot their way through instead.”

The monastery, dating to the 16th century, is an important site for both Russians and Ukrainians.

“It is a gem of Orthodoxy,” Kozlovsky said.

It has also been a place difficult for the Ukrainian government to balance religious freedom against loyalty in wartime.

The monastery’s monks, who are viewed as traitors by Ukrainian nationalis­ts, have for years been staunchly pro-Russian, asserting they have a right to follow the religious path of their choosing even if their country is at war.

The monastery’s leadership, for example, has subordinat­ed itself to a senior cleric in Donetsk, the capital of one of the two Russianbac­ked breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine.

They “explain the war by saying that it is God’s plan, but not the plan of the Russian army,” said Kozlovsky.

After Russia invaded in February, believers came expecting safety. The monastery had been sheltering internally displaced people for years, dating to Ukraine’s conflict with Russian-backed separatist­s that started in 2014.

“This is what they thought,” said Col. Svyatoslav Zagorsky, a regional police chief. “But look, as we see, experience is showing us exactly the opposite.”

On June 3, artillery shells slammed with a deafening bang into a park bordering the monastery, landscaped with yellow roses near the riverbank.

A horrible sensation of pressure waves from the explosions rippled through the churches.

Some monks gathered in the stairway to a basement, sweating and wide-eyed and seeking safety. But while they wished for the hostilitie­s to stop, they declined to condemn the Russian army.

One monk, Brother Prokhor, said, “We pray for peace in the whole world, so nobody shoots anywhere.”

But asked what he thought of the Russians shelling the monastery, he hesitated.

“I don’t know who is firing,” he said. “They shoot from far away — I cannot see them.”

 ?? IVOR PRICKETT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sister Ioanna, a nun from the Sviatohirs­k Monastery of the Caves, was injured by shelling.
IVOR PRICKETT/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sister Ioanna, a nun from the Sviatohirs­k Monastery of the Caves, was injured by shelling.

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