Imperial Valley Press

Russian patriarch blesses new Paris church, a Putin project

WILL INCLUDE A CULTURAL CENTER AND A SCHOOL

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PARIS (AP) — The patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church consecrate­d a prominent new church Sunday near the Eiffel Tower seen as a controvers­ial symbol of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s influence in Europe.

Patriarch Kirill, a close ally of Putin, led the elaborate sanctifyin­g ceremony in the Saint Trinity Church on the banks of the Seine River, the gold-domed centerpiec­e of a $106 million complex owned by the Russian government that will include a cultural center and a school.

The hours-long ceremony included the consecrati­on of the altar, a procession around the grounds and the placing of relics, accompanie­d by an allmale choir and the rich smells of incense.

The Paris mayor, Russian model Natalia Vodianova, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev’s wife Svetlana and members of France’s large Russian community crowded into the invitation-only, high-security event in the imposing, block-shaped white church.

While it was primarily a religious event, it carried strong political overtones.

The staunchly conservati­ve Kirill came to Paris’ Left Bank as Europe faces a populist push against multicultu­ral liberalism in favor of the kind of tougher, more traditiona­l politics that Putin and the Russian Orthodox Church eschew. And his visit comes as some leading French and other European politician­s argue for better relations with Russia after years of diplomatic tensions over Moscow’s role in the conflicts in Syria and Ukraine.

Churchgoer Ekaterina Besse, a Russian living in Paris, welcomed the new church complex and expressed hope for a “thaw” in relations.

“We can see this is also a political gesture as much as a religious one,” she said.

Putin championed the project for a new Russian church in Paris, which prompted criticism from rights groups when it was first approved in 2008, and new concerns as diplomatic relations soured in ensuing years. Putin played down suspicions that it would be used by Russian secret services to spy on sensitive government buildings and embassies in the surroundin­g neighborho­od.

The Russian stateowned church on a prominent piece of Parisian real estate is also an awkward symbol for secular France, which adheres firmly to its division between church and state.

In Russia — until 25 years ago an officially atheist state — the role of the church has grown under Putin, notably in its lobbying for traditiona­l family policies and against homosexual­ity. Putin, who once explained the 2014 annexation of the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine by noting that the prince of the ancient Kievan Russian state was baptized there more than 1,000 years ago, has publicly supported conservati­ve Christian groups, arguing that Western liberal values are alien to Russians.

The Russian patriarch thanked France for allowing the constructi­on of the “magnificen­t” Paris site. In meetings with Russian emigres, he warned that it’s “dangerous” for them to lose their loyalty to Russia.

“It’s your duty. You can live wherever you want, but you cannot break spiritual and cultural ties with your people,” he said.

 ??  ?? Russian Patriarch Kirill attends a blessing ceremony Sunday in the Saint Trinity Church on the banks of the Seine River, in Paris. AP PHOTO
Russian Patriarch Kirill attends a blessing ceremony Sunday in the Saint Trinity Church on the banks of the Seine River, in Paris. AP PHOTO

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