Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 7 – The death on Saturday of Metropolitan
Vladimir, the longtime head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow
Patriarchate, simultaneously highlights the failure of Moscow Patriarch Kirill in
Ukraine, Russian commentators say, and likely accelerates a wholesale re-alignment of Orthodox
bishoprics and congregations in Ukraine.
Vladimir, who died at the age of 79
after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease which in fact forced him to give
up his day-to-day management of his church earlier this year after serving as
its metropolitan since 1992, was a major figure not only in Ukraine but in
Russian Orthodoxy more generally.
In 1990, he finished a close second
to Metropolitan Aleksii in the voting for a new Moscow patriarch, and in the
two decades since that time, he has played a key role not only in the expansion
of the bishoprics of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine but also in the
retention of its congregations, which otherwise might have left that hierarchy.
While many Ukrainians viewed
Vladimir as little more than Moscow’s man in their country, Russian
commentators remember him as something more than that and at least some are
worried that his death will lead to the further decline in the position of the Moscow
Patriarchate in Ukraine.
In a comment on Forum-MSK.org, that
site’s editor, Anatoly Baranov said that Vladimir “was one of the most
interesting officials of the Russian Orthodox Church” and almost became its
patriarch on two occasions, first in 1990 when he lost to Aleksii and then in
2009 when he was nominated but withdrew (forum-msk.org/material/news/10415692.html).
Vladimir’s withdrawal allowed Kirill
to be elected, a misfortune, Baranov says, because “if the intelligent and
experienced Kyiv metropolitan had become head of the Russian Orthodox Church,
it is likely that the events in Ukraine would have developed in an entirely
different way.”
“The aggressive and often stupid
foreign policy of Patriarch Kirill is far from the least important factor
underlying the Ukrainian crisis,” the editor says. What happened was this: “the
Kremlin began to openly define the policy of the Russian Orthodox Church, and
Patriarch Kirill did not find in himself the courage to conduct his own.”
Metropolitan Vladimir was “another
man” entirely, Baranov continues, especially with regard to the level of his
authority in society outside of Russia.
And he concludes: “the tragic events in Ukraine not by accident coincided
with the deterioration of the health of the Kyiv metropolitan, and his life
ended along with the disappearance of that Ukraine which he knew.”
Vladimir’s authority was truly
enormous, and with his passing, Moscow and the Moscow Patriarchate are going to
find it ever more difficult to retain their positions among the Orthodox in
Ukraine. Vladimir Putin and Patriarch
Kirill implicitly recognized this in their message of sympathy on Vladimir’s
death (expert.ru/2014/07/5/vladimir-putin-i-patriarh-kirill-vyirazili-soboleznovanie-v-svyazi-s-konchinoj-mitropolita-kievskogo-i-vseya-ukrainyi-vladimira/).
But their words are unlikely to slow
the process of the Ukrainianization of Orthodoxy in Ukraine at an
organizational level, and with that process accelerating, both the Kremlin and
especially Patriarch Kirill are going to see their leverage religious and
political decline there, in the post-Soviet states, and internationally as well.
Some Orthodox writers have been
referring to Vladimir as “a Soviet church functionary,” one of the last of a
generation that will inevitably disappear.
But unlike Kirill, who remains very much what he was, the late Vladimir
was someone who made an attempt to change. That gave him an authority Kirill
very much lacks (portal-credo.ru/site/?act=authority&id=2090).
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