Date: 28 March 2023 Author: Grzegorz Kuczyński

Ukraine Expels Pro-Russian Clergy from Kyiv Pechersk Lavra

Orthodox monks who had been ordered out of a monastery in Kyiv refused to leave as a deadline to vacate the complex expired back on March 29. Metropolitan Pavlo, an abbot of the monastery, said that the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) would not leave the site pending the outcome of a lawsuit to stop the eviction. Force will not be used to evict representatives of the UOC from the Pechersk Lavra in Kyiv, according to the Ukrainian authorities. But they have more tools––as they can ban the church.

SOURCE: lavra.ua

The site is owned by the Ukrainian government and operated by the culture ministry. Since the 1990s, it was a holy site of the Moscow-affiliated Orthodox church. This triggered protests from the autocephalous Orthodox Church of Ukraine. After Russia invaded Ukraine, the Ukrainian government has been cracking down on the UOC over its historic ties to the Russian Orthodox Church. Last November, the Security Service of Ukraine, also known as the SBU, conducted searches in various buildings of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate, even though it had removed all mentions of the Moscow Patriarchate back in May. [Read our special report: Ukraine’s Approach to Russian-Linked Orthodox Church] The Russian-controlled church’s lease on a part of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra – called the Upper Lavra – expired on January 1, and the Ukrainian government in late December decided not to extend the lease. Evicting monks from Ukraine’s most important Orthodox site is a major blow to the Russian-linked church. In early December 2022, a priest of the Ukraine-affiliated Orthodox Church of Ukraine stated that the historic monastery had become the church’s site, saying historical justice was restored. On March 10, the culture ministry issued a statement saying monks from the UOC-MP must leave the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, Ukraine’s most important Orthodox monastery. It claimed the monks had violated some vague maintenance rules issued by state agencies, the National Security Council, and defense and culture ministries. The government has said they must leave the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, but the monks say the order has no basis and plan to stay “as long as physically possible”. “The only reason for the eviction from the Orthodox site is just a whim of culture ministry officials, a reminiscence of the Soviet rule in the 1960s,” the UOC-MP said in a statement. The Russian Orthodox Church criticized the decision, calling it extremely unlawful. Representatives of the Moscow-linked Ukrainian Orthodox Church arrived at the Office of President Zelensky on March 20, but the president refused to meet them.

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