Ecumenical Patriarch signs decree
granting Ukraine church independence
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[January 05, 2019]
By Daren Butler and Bulent Usta
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - The spiritual head of
Orthodox Christians worldwide formally granted independence to the
Ukrainian church on Saturday, marking an historic split from Russia
which Ukrainian leaders see as vital to the country's security.
The decree, granting "autocephaly", was signed by Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew at a service with the head of the Ukrainian church
Metropolitan Epifaniy and President Petro Poroshenko in St George's
Cathedral in Istanbul.
"I want to thank the millions of Ukrainians around the world who
responded to my appeal to pray for the church to be established,"
Poroshenko said at a ceremony accompanied by solemn liturgical singing.
"I want to thank the generations of Ukrainians who dreamed...and finally
God sent us the Orthodox Church of Ukraine," he told the congregation in
the crowded church.
The patriarchate, the seat of the spiritual leader of some 300 million
Orthodox Christians worldwide, endorsed Ukraine's request for the new
church in October. The decree, or Tomos, will be handed to Epifaniy at a
ceremony on Sunday, completing the process of recognition by the
Ecumenical Patriarchate.
Ukraine last month chose 39-year-old Epifaniy to head the new church, in
a move which Poroshenko compared to Ukraine's referendum for
independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
The move incensed Moscow, and prompted President Vladimir Putin to warn
of possible bloodshed in his annual news conference. Relations between
Ukraine and Russia collapsed after Moscow's seizure of Crimea in 2014.
Ukraine imposed martial law in November, citing the threat of a
full-scale invasion after Russia captured three of its vessels in the
Kerch Strait.
BITTER RUSSIAN OPPOSITION
The Ukrainian Orthodox church has been beholden to Moscow for hundreds
of years, and Ukraine's leaders see church independence as vital to
tackling Russian meddling.
Kiev says Moscow-backed churches on its soil are a Kremlin tool to
spread propaganda and support fighters in the eastern Donbass region in
a conflict that has killed more than 10,000 people. The churches
strongly deny this.
"Tomos - is just a paper, the result of restless political and personal
ambitions. It was signed in breach of canonicity and this is why it has
no power", Vladimir Legoida, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church
Synodal Department for Church-Society and Media Relations, posted in
Telegram messenger.
Epifaniy was chosen by a council at the St Sophia Cathedral in Kiev,
built by the son of Prince Volodymyr whose baptism in 988 led to the
spread of Christianity in the region.
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Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew arrives at a ceremony marking the
new Ukrainian Orthodox church's independence, at St. George's
Cathedral, the seat of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, in Istanbul,
Turkey January 5, 2019. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
The new church may boost pro-Western leader Poroshenko, who lobbied
hard for its creation and faces a tight election race in March.
Russia bitterly opposes the split, comparing it to the Great Schism
of 1054 that divided western and eastern Christianity. Russian
Orthodox Patriarch Kirill made a last ditch appeal against the
process last month.
"Huge win for Ukraine, defeat for the Kremlin," economist Timothy
Ash wrote on Twitter. "(It) will make Moscow's hope of some future
pull of Ukraine back into its 'orbit' nigh on impossible without the
use of overwhelming (catastrophic) military force."
Religious divisions deepened in Ukraine after 2014 and two Orthodox
factions vie for dominance.
The church known as the Moscow Patriarchate, aligned with the
Russian Orthodox Church, sees itself as the only legitimate church
in Ukraine. On Dec. 20, Ukrainian MPs passed a law that could force
the church to add "Russian" to its name.
The rival Kiev Patriarchate was born after the collapse of the
Soviet Union and its popularity has grown since 2014. It favors
European integration and championed the independent church but the
Moscow Patriarchate denounces it as schismatic.
(Additional reporting by Natalia Zinets in Kiev and Maxim Rodionov
in Moscow; Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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