Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 16 – The Moscow
Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church has set up a new staff in the synod
department of external church affairs to blacken the reputation of the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyiv Patriarchate, to block the Universal
Patriarch from recognizing the Kyiv church as canonical, and to destabilize religious
conditions across Ukraine.
In an article on Ukrinform.ru
entitled “The Moscow Patriarchate as Commissar of Hybrid War,” Kyiv journalist
Lana Samokhvalova says that this staff, headquartered in Moscow, seeks to
create controversies between the Orthodox churches in Ukraine so as to be able
to complain to the OSCE and other international bodies that Ukraine is
religiously intolerant (ukrinform.ru/rubric-community/1944967-moskovskiy-patriarhat-kak-komissar-gibridnoy-voynyi.html).
Among the groups this new staff
oversees are the Union of Orthodox Brotherhoods, the Union of Orthodox
Citizens, the Association of Orthodox Citizens, and other radical nationalist
groups not publicly associated with the Moscow Patriarchate in order to suggest
that these conflicts arise within Ukraine and to give Moscow deniability as far
as its role is concerned.
The chief operative of this Moscow
staff in Ukraine is the Union of Orthodox Journalists which “in fact,”
Samokhvalova says, “is neither a union or contain journalists or Orthodox
faithful.” Instead, it is an FSB operation intended to provoke conflicts
between the Moscow Patriarchate and the parishes of the Kyiv Patriarchate and
then blame them on the latter.
The Ukrainian journalist says that
articles in Moscow Patriarchate outlets show that the new staff is pursuing the
following five goals: discrediting all by Moscow churches in Ukraine, bringing
religious problems in Ukraine to the attention of the Universal Patriarchate in
the hopes of blocking its recognition of Kyiv as a canonical patriarchate, “deforming
[Ukraine’s] information space, creating conditions within the faithful for
civic strife, and intimidating pro-Kyiv churchmen by threatening them in
various ways.
The Kyiv journalist says that she concludes
“as a hypothesis” that the new staff has “yet another goal: to create
conditions under which [its] real boss Vladimir Putin can at any moment
exacerbate the situation by declaring that he wants to ‘defend canonical
orthodoxy,’” and thus provide cover for more Russian aggression against
Ukraine.
The new staff refers to itself on
occasion as “a department for ‘the defense of the true believers,’” although it
is anything but a religious group with religious goals. Instead, it seeks to
provoke scandals, then exacerbate them, and then “with the help of the ombudsmen
for the defense of the rights of believers” make political capital out of them
both in Ukraine and abroad.
Ukraine’s only defense against this
effort, Samokhvalova says, is, in the short run, to expose it as much as
possible, and in the longer run to create a national Orthodox church separate
from Moscow’s.
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