Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 6 – Ukraine’s
Orthodox Christians care far less about the divisions between the church
hierarchies descending from Kyiv or Moscow than do politicians and
commentators, an attitude that seriously reduces the importance of the Moscow
Patriarchate as a political player in Ukraine.
In an article in “NG-Religii”
published yesterday, journalist Yuliya Yurkova says that much of the discussion
by politicians and commentators reflects a simplified and distorted view of the
nature of religious preferences among Ukrainians and its political consequences
for their country and Russia (ng.ru/ng_religii/2014-02-05/16_patriarhat.html).
One Russian politician, she notes, “not
long ago proposed dividing Ukraine into Orthodox and Catholic parts,” as if western
Ukraine was all Catholic and eastern Ukraine was all Russian Orthodox of the
Moscow Patriarchate. That is an extreme case, but many talk about divisions
between the Orthodox of the Kyiv Patriarchate and those of the Moscow
Patriarchate.
Such commentators assume that
Ukrainians who go to parishes subordinate to the national Kyiv Patriarchate are
inevitably pro-Maidan and those who go to parishes subordinate to the Moscow
Patriarchate are pro-Moscow, but that simply isn’t the case for most ordinary
believers, Yurkova says. They are Orthodox who attend churches “of different
jurisdictions.”
A recent visit to Dneprpetrovsk in eastern
Ukraine convinced her of that, she continues.
Despite the fact that regional officials “support” the Moscow
Patriarchate congregations, the local bishopric of the Ukrainian Orthodox
Church of the Kyiv Patriarchate is “developing quite successfully.” But that may have less to do with politics
than many think.
The Kyiv Patriarchate there last
year opened the first “and so far the only” seminar in south-eastern Ukraine, a
step that will allow it to “resolve the problem of preparing priests for [its]
churches from the local population.” At
present, Yurkova says, in most of them, the priests come from western Ukraine.
One Kyiv Patriarchate priest said he
had resisted being assigned to eastern Ukraine because people in western
Ukraine suggested that “it is difficult to serve in the east ... because
everyone goes to ‘Moscow’ churches.” Some in Lviv, he said, even thought that
by agreeing to go he had “transferred to another Patriarchate.”
But according to Yurkova, many
Ukrainian Orthodox are not focused on the divisions between the Kyiv and Moscow
churches. One poll found that more than 40 percent do not care a great deal
about the split between these hierarchies and, while they are aware of it, they
do not know the details or allow it to dictate which church they attend.
“The majority simply don’t consider
[that] necessary,” Yurkova says. As one
believer told her, “I go sometimes there and sometimes here.” When he wants to
go to church near his home, he goes to a Moscow Patriarchate congregation
because it is closer; when he wants to do so near his work, he goes to a Kyiv
church because it is nearby.
“For me, this does not have [any]
significance,” he said.
Not every believer is totally
indifferent. Some, even those who are not pro-Maidan, prefer the Ukrainian
Patriarchate churches because the services are in Ukrainian, and some, even if
they are, undoubtedly prefer the Moscow Patriarchate churches because there
Russian is used. But in most cases, even these parishioners do not view such
choices as exclusively political ones.
Moreover, Yurkova continues, many
priests on both sides of the divide appear to have an adopted a similarly
apolitical approach and do not seek to attract or exclude people because of their
support for one or another political line. But again there are exceptions, and
these often attract the most attention.
The reality, the “NG-Religii”
journalist says, is that one only “rarely hears” about the divide between the
two patriarchates in churches even though one hears a great deal about it on
the streets and among commentators, a pattern that has important if not always recognized
consequences for the two hierarches.
On the one hand, it suggests that
shifts in allegiance from the Moscow Patriarchate to the Kyiv Patriarchate may
have less significance than many Ukrainian nationalists hope and many Russian
nationalists in Moscow fear. And on the other, it means that the Moscow
Patriarchate likely has far less influence in Ukraine than they claim.
That is critical because Moscow
Patriarch Kirill has argued that his church can play a major role in keeping
Ukraine in Russia’s political orbit. If the patterns Yurkova found in fact
hold, that is unlikely to be the case in many of the Moscow parishes there. And
consequently, the Moscow church won’t be able to play the role Kirill suggests
and that many fear.
All this, of course, is not to
suggest that the establishment of an autocephalous Ukrainian Orthodox Church is
not an important national goal, especially given the Moscow Patriarchate's pretensions, but rather to argue for a
more cautious interpretation of what it and its Moscow “competitor” can in fact
do during the current political crisis and beyond.
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