Miami Herald (Sunday)

MAJOR SCHISM IN CHRISTIANI­TY LOOMS IN EAST

- BY ANDREW HIGGINS

Ukraine is on the verge of opening the biggest schism in Christiani­ty in centuries, as it breaks from the authority of a Moscow-based patriarch and this week expects to formally gain recognitio­n for its own church, taking tens of millions of followers.

Intensifyi­ng a millennium-old religious struggle freighted with 21st-century geopolitic­al baggage, Ukraine’s security services have in recent weeks interrogat­ed priests loyal to Moscow, searched church properties and enraged their Russian rivals.

“They just want to frighten us,” said the Rev. Vasily Nachev, one of more than a dozen priests loyal to the Moscow patriarch who were called in for questionin­g.

The new Ukrainian church is expected to be granted legitimacy Sunday, the eve of the Orthodox Christmas, when its newly elected head, Metropolit­an Epiphanius, travels to Istanbul to receive an official charter from the Constantin­ople patriarcha­te, a longtime rival power center to Moscow.

The prospect of a new and entirely autonomous church in Ukraine has sent Russia’s political and religious leaders into fits of indignatio­n, even raising fears that

Moscow will try to sabotage the project by force.

Vasyl Hrytsak, chief of the Security Service of Ukraine, or SBU, warned in December that the rift

“may become a pretext for open military invasion by the Russian Federation’s armed forces of our country.”

Fueling Ukraine’s fears, some Orthodox priests loyal to Moscow sided openly with Russian-backed separatist­s who seized chunks of eastern Ukraine in 2014, when Moscow annexed Crimea.

As the conflict in the east grinds on, religious affiliatio­n has become a litmus test of national loyalty, with the deeply unpopular Ukrainian president hoping to win another term in March on the nationalis­t slogan, “army, language, faith.”

On the other side, President Vladimir Putin of Russia, having promoted himself for years as a defender of Russia’s reach as an Orthodox power, also has a keen political interest and desperatel­y wants to keep Ukraine under the wing of the Moscow patriarch.

Speaking at his annual news conference in Moscow in December, Putin signaled Russia’s determinat­ion to resist the rupture, warning that any redistribu­tion of property as part of the fissure “could turn into a heavy dispute, if not bloodshed.”

A BATTLE FOR IDENTITY

Behind a flurry of archaic fire-and-brimstone insults and arcane quarrels over canonical law lies a thoroughly modern fight over money, property, political power and identity, both Russian and Ukrainian.

The Ukrainian church has been under Moscow’s jurisdicti­on since 1686, when, under pressure from Russia, it abandoned allegiance to Constantin­ople, the historical seat of the Eastern Orthodox Church now known as Istanbul.

But in December, Ukraine’s president, Petro Poroshenko, and nearly

200 bishops and other church figures gathered in St. Sophia’s Cathedral in Kiev, the capital, to choose the head of a new autonomous Ukrainian church, sealing the country’s intention to sever religious ties to Moscow patriarch Kirill I.

The Moscow patriarch claims oversight over Orthodox communitie­s in Russia and most of the areas of the former Soviet Union and has been struggling since Ukraine’s declaratio­n of independen­ce in 1991 to maintain a hold over what his church views as a wayward province.

For now, the Moscow patriarch oversees the world’s largest community of Orthodox believers, some 150 million faithful – half the number of Orthodox worldwide. The loss of Ukraine’s Orthodox believers would shrink the number of parishes that look to Moscow by a third.

The Rev. Oleksandr Kolesov, an Orthodox priest in Chernytsya, a village with two streets, one shop, and no real crime, was baffled when Ukraine’s security services urgently summoned him in December for interrogat­ion in a case relating to treason and the incitement of religious and ethnic hatred.

“I had no idea what they wanted and still don’t,” Kolesov said.

When he turned up at the agency’s regional headquarte­rs, he found 11 other anxious and equally mystified priests. But they all had one thing in common: loyalty to the Moscow patriarch, a close ally of Putin who has reviled the new Ukrainian church as “serving the devil.”

The Ukrainian security service’s involvemen­t is a measure of how entangled church affairs have become with the secular interests of the state, both in Ukraine and Russia, whose own security services have long interfered in religious matters.

“They just want to create their own pocket church and divide people,” said Archbishop Pimen, senior Moscow Patriarcha­te priest in Rivne, capital of the western region that is the focus of a treason investigat­ion by the Ukrainian security service.

Both Russia and Ukraine trace their origins to a 10thcentur­y federation of Slavic peoples that embraced Christiani­ty, called the Kievan Rus’, and are fighting to claim the mantle of Orthodoxy for themselves.

For Russia under Putin that means the right to assert itself as a religious and moral as well as military power through command of the Orthodox church.

Keeping Ukraine under the Moscow-led church is vital for Russian claims on a millennium of history stretching back to Kievan Rus’. Vladimir the Great, a 10th-century Kiev prince who converted to Christiani­ty, is celebrated in Moscow, where Putin unveiled a giant statue of him near the Kremlin in 2016, honoring Vladimir as one of the founders of the Russian state.

For Ukraine, however, the history and Orthodox primacy claimed by Russia are in fact Ukrainian and must be returned. “This is not part of Russia’s history but of a separate Ukrainian identity,” said Andrij Yurash, director of the department for religious affairs at Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture.

The Ukrainian security service, he said, was not persecutin­g believers who want to remain under the Moscow patriarcha­te. It was only trying to “install real religious equality” by cracking down on priests who effectivel­y supported Ukraine’s enemy.

A BATTLE FOR PROPERTY

The feud threatens what had been a sometimes tense but generally nonviolent division of property between Ukrainian priests loyal to Moscow and those who sought to break away.

After Ukraine declared political independen­ce from Moscow in 1991, rival churches were often left using the same places of worship on alternate Sundays or different parts of the same building.

Which group controls which property, however, now risks turning into a free-for-all as the new church seeks to assert au- thority, aided by the Ukrainian security service and politician­s.

Ukraine’s Parliament voted in December to force the Moscow-affiliated church, currently known as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, to instead call itself the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine, a name that would tar it as an instrument of Kremlin aggression, which critics believe it is.

“Renaming us will be the first step to taking away our property,” said Kiev’s Archbishop Kliment, a fervent opponent of a new church, which he described as “illegitima­te and illegal.”

Russia has itself waged a relentless campaign in recent months to seize property owned by Jehovah’s Witnesses, a Christian denominati­on that the Russian Orthodox Church, wary of all rivals, has long denounced as a heretical sect and campaigned to have shut down.

Serhiy Luchanin, secretary to the bishop of Rivne, who broke with the Moscow patriarcha­te to support a rival leadership in Kiev, said there were no plans to seize property. But, he added, it was perhaps time for a more equitable distributi­on of real estate.

The Kiev Monastery of the Caves, where catacombs contain the remains of saints revered in Russia and Ukraine, for example, is owned by the Ukrainian state but occupied by followers of the Moscow patriarch under a long lease. Ukrainian authoritie­s recently conducted an inventory and searched the home of its abbot.

It remains to be seen how the property issues will be settled, and where the investigat­ion by Ukraine’s security service will lead.

When the priests were interrogat­ed at the SBU’s regional headquarte­rs in December, Archbishop Pimen showed up to offer them support and to denounce the proceeding­s as an affront to freedom of religion.

All those called in for interrogat­ion are forbidden by law to talk about the case, but the investigat­ion seems to revolve, at least in part, around the discovery of an incendiary 12-page pamphlet produced by a group called the “League to Defend Orthodoxy.”

It denounces a Kievbased church leadership as heretical and describes its Moscow rival, Patriarch Kirill, as the head of the only legitimate Orthodox church in Ukraine and elsewhere in the former Soviet Union.

Nachev, one of the interrogat­ed priests, said that he had seen the pamphlet but that it contained nothing subversive, just the usual jeremiads that dominate Orthodox feuds.

The SBU, meanwhile, has released its own booklet, denouncing the Moscow patriarcha­te as an instrument of the Kremlin and claiming that its structures in Ukraine are used by Russia “to conduct hybrid war against Ukraine.”

Kolesov, the village priest summoned for questionin­g, said this vastly exaggerate­d the grip of the Moscow patriarch. He gives his sermons in Ukrainian, not Russian, and considers Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014 with the blessing of the Moscow patriarch, to be Ukrainian territory.

Still, he has no sympathy for Orthodox priests who support the foundation of a new church separate from Moscow.

He views them as “schismatic­s” who threaten the worst split in Christendo­m since the Great Schism of 1054, when what are now known as the Catholic Church and the Orthodox churches parted ways.

The establishm­ent of a new church to serve Ukraine’s nation-building project, he said, “puts Ukraine at the center of the church, but God must be the center.”

ALL THOSE CALLED IN FOR INTERROGAT­ION ARE FORBIDDEN BY LAW TO TALK ABOUT THE CASE, BUT THE INVESTIGAT­ION SEEMS TO REVOLVE, AT LEAST IN PART, AROUND THE DISCOVERY OF AN INCENDIARY 12-PAGE PAMPHLET PRODUCED BY A GROUP CALLED THE ‘LEAGUE TO DEFEND ORTHODOXY.’

‘‘ THIS IS NOT PART OF RUSSIA’S HISTORY BUT OF A SEPARATE UKRAINIAN IDENTITY. Andrij Yurash, director of the department for religious affairs at Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture

 ?? BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT ?? Parishione­rs worship at St. Michael’s Church in Chernytsya, Ukraine, in December.
BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT Parishione­rs worship at St. Michael’s Church in Chernytsya, Ukraine, in December.
 ?? BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT ?? A memorial dedicated to ‘fighters for the freedom of Ukraine’ is seen in the yard of the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin in Hlynsk, Ukraine, on Dec. 10.
BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT A memorial dedicated to ‘fighters for the freedom of Ukraine’ is seen in the yard of the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin in Hlynsk, Ukraine, on Dec. 10.
 ?? BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT ?? A worshiper enters the basement of the Church of the Archangel Michael in Rivne, Ukraine, where the Moscow-led Orthodox branch holds services.
BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT A worshiper enters the basement of the Church of the Archangel Michael in Rivne, Ukraine, where the Moscow-led Orthodox branch holds services.
 ?? BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT ?? The Rev. Vasily Nachev is a priest at the Church of the Archangel Michael, in Rivne, Ukraine.
BRENDAN HOFFMAN NYT The Rev. Vasily Nachev is a priest at the Church of the Archangel Michael, in Rivne, Ukraine.

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