
A view of the centre of the old quarter of Lvov. Shall this be the last remaining portion of a rump “Ukraine” or shall it be Polish, yet again? The worm appears to be turning…
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko praised the role of the Uniate church in national life and in its support for the integration of the Ukraine into the EU. The Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church “certainly plays an important role as a key supporter of our national identity and a herald of our inseparable connection with Europe”, Mr Yushchenko said on Monday at a meeting with students and seminarians of the Ukrainian Papal College of St Josaphat in Vatican City. In reference to the Ukrainian Papal College, the President noted, according to his press-service, “During many years of trial for the Ukrainian people, whilst Greek-Catholicism was banned by the Communists, it was the only here that a centre existed that nourished the Greek-Catholic faith by providing spiritual formation for Ukrainian [clergy], allowing them to serve our people by bringing them the words of faith”.
The Ukrainian Papal College of St Josaphat is directly under the jurisdiction of the Vatican Congregation for the Oriental Churches. During the time of its existence, the college has produced some 400 priests, of whom 25 became bishops. At present, there are 50 students from the Ukraine and the Galician diaspora. The seminarians study at various Papal institutions in Rome, and they take courses in liturgics, church chant, and the history of the Ukrainian [Uniate] church at St Josaphat. Courses are taught in Ukrainian and Italian.
At the forefront of nationalism in the early 1990s, activists of the Greek-Orthodox Church used force to seize some hundreds of Orthodox churches in the western Ukraine, [using violence against] parishioners and priests [in the process]. No criminal cases were initiated [as a result of these actions]. The Union of Brest remains one of the main problems in the dialogue between the Vatican and the Patriarchate of Moscow and all Russia.
2 June 2009
Interfax-Religion
http://www.interfax-religion.ru/?act=news&div=30470 (in Russian)
http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=news&div=6087 (in English)
Editor’s Note:
This is interesting… Paragraph 2 does not exist in the English version, whilst paragraph 3 does not exist in the Russian version. It is why I have trackbacks to both versions.
Yushchenko is circling the wagons… when one reflects that the Ukrainian economy is due to contract by 20 percent this year, one finds that not surprising. Russia is in better shape, in fact, the rouble has been steadily gaining on the dollar. It has gone from 38 to the dollar earlier in the year to 30.5 per USD today. That is, not only is the Ukraine falling apart, but, the US does not have the funds to bail it out, and the exchange rates suggest that the Russian economy is not as hard-hit as Western media outlets have reported.
Therefore, Yushchenko is appealing to his most hard-core supporters, the Galician Uniates. They, and Philaret Denisenko’s schismatics, shall probably be the last ones to stand around the failed Orangies. Does this presage a “two-Ukraine” future? I am thinking that the former tsarist Russian territory could very well rejoin the RF, whilst the former Polish region of Galicia becomes either a rump “Ukrainian” entity or it shall be reabsorbed by Poland (shades of 1919!). This is not without the realm of possibility, and it seems more probable as the Ukrainian economy tanks and more Ukrainians are thrown out of work.
Poor Yushchenko… he is left with nothing but a sodden cardboard box. The only question left is whether he shall reside in Edmonton or in Chicago when he flees into exile. He’ll just be another embittered émigré “politician”, with no real power or means, posturing to the end of his days. A sad end…
Justice Justice and Divine Vengeance Pursuing Crime (Pierre-Paul Prud’hon, 1808)
Barbara-Marie Drezhlo