Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 25 – One of the most
often objected to qualities of the previous Russian Orthodox exarch in Minsk
was that he lacked connections to Belarus. Metropolitan Pavel, 68, was an
ethnic Russian and, despite Belarusian law prohibiting this, was the leader of
a denomination there but not a citizen of the republic.
On the one hand, that left him tone
deaf to many of the concerns of the Belarusian people; and on the other,
because Pavel symbolized the imperial dimension of the Moscow Patriarchate, his
presence helped spark talk about the possibility of autocephaly for the Belarusian
church, talk that only increased after Ukraine gained that status.
Now, in response to the problems
Pavel’s uncertain approach to the demonstrations have caused and to ever more
frequent calls for autocephaly, the Moscow Patriarchate has replaced him with Bishop
Veniamin (Tupeko), 51, a native of Brest Oblast and an ethnic Belarusian (ng.ru/faith/2020-08-25/1_7946_religion.html).
Symbolically, this change means a
lot, although even more than Pavel, Veniamin is associated with the idea, pushed
by the Kremlin, that Russians, Belarusians and Ukrainians are one people not
three nations. It may be enough to quiet talk of autocephaly for a time, but it
may not end it, especially if Veniamin does not take steps to acquire Belarusian
citizenship.
She suggests that Veniamin has the additional virtue from Moscow’s perspective of being someone who will be able to find a common language with Alyaksandr Lukashenka because of his engineering education background and his asceticism. As a result, she argues he will fit in well in Belarus.
Other
Belarusian observers aren’t so sure. Aleksandr Shramko, a former ROC priest,
says that in his view, the new appointment is “not the best news” (svoboda.org/a/30803747.html). The church in Belarus has “two
symbolic wings,” he says, those like Grodno Bishop Artemy who support the
protests and others who support Lukashenka.
“Metropolitan
Pavel was somewhere in between these two. As far as Veniamin is concerned,”
Shramko continues, “he is a very conservative individual.” He is likely to be
more concerned with maintaining order within the church and less interested in
having the church take a political position.
Others, like Moscow religious affairs specialist
Nikolay Mitrokhin, agree, and argue that Veniamin will work to strengthen the
church rather than involve it in politics. But to the extent that is true, his
moves will work for Lukashenka rather than for the Belarusian people in the
streets – and that may soon dispel any optimism about his appointment.
No comments:
Post a Comment