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Home Local news Ukraine to Prohibit Orthodox Church Over Alleged Ties to Moscow’s Pro-War Church
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Ukraine to Prohibit Orthodox Church Over Alleged Ties to Moscow’s Pro-War Church

    Ukraine moves to ban an Orthodox church it says is linked with pro-war Moscow church
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    The Ukrainian authorities have announced that a faction of the Orthodox Church has not cut its deep-rooted connections with Moscow, and this could lead to its prohibition.

    This potential prohibition targets one of the two competing branches of Orthodoxy within Ukraine. It highlights the complex role of religion as Ukraine defends itself against the invasion by Russia. Orthodoxy, dominant in both nations, has become both a cultural and spiritual arena of conflict alongside the ongoing war.

    This measure follows a year after the Ukrainian Parliament enacted a law that outlawed the Russian Orthodox Church, headquartered in Moscow, due to its pronounced backing of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    This legislation also enabled the prohibition of any organization linked to the Russian church, which prompted the government to initiate a probe into the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, known for its historical links to Moscow.

    The UOC, from the outset in 2022, condemned Russia’s full-scale invasion and proclaimed its autonomy from the Moscow church in the same year, reaffirming this position in 2025.

    Even so, the government says the UOC has refused to take necessary steps, such as revising its governing documents, to complete that separation.

    The Aug. 27 government action, while long in the works, still requires more legal processes to take full effect.

    The government has appealed to the court to terminate the operations of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church itself. Should the church be defeated, it retains the option to appeal to a higher court before the decision is final—a process anticipated to conclude within a few months, according to its legal representative.

    The finding that the UOC is Moscow-linked was published by the State Service of Ukraine on Ethnopolitics and Freedom of Conscience, a government entity known by its Ukrainian-language acronym DESS.

    Under the law, some UOC congregations could also find themselves barred from using property they don’t own — a significant issue in a country where the state owns and leases out many historic church sites.

    Ties to Moscow in dispute

    The order specifically targets the “Kyiv Metropolis” of the UOC — which is essentially the governing center. It is led by Metropolitan Onufry, a bishop whose citizenship Ukraine has already revoked. Under the law, UOC-related entities such as monasteries and regional eparchies (comparable to dioceses) could face similar sanctions.

    The UOC declared in 2022 that it was independent from Moscow and began taking ritually potent steps to underscore that split, such as refusing to commemorate Moscow Patriarch Kirill in its liturgies. Kirill is an avid supporter of the Russian invasion. He presided over a 2024 council that called it a holy war.

    Earlier this year, the DESS called on the UOC to take further steps to show its complete separation from Moscow. That included any documentation that it objected to the Russian church taking control of the UOC’s churches in Russian-occupied territories.

    Onufry refused, saying the UOC’s earlier declarations of independence were adequate.

    The government disagreed.

    “This is not a religious organization, but a branch of an aggressor state,” asserted a headline on the DESS website.

    UOC lawyer Robert Amsterdam said in a statement that the government’s finding “intentionally ignored” the UOC’s separation from Moscow “and its undertaking of practical steps to prove this separation, including the setting up of parishes abroad to serve the needs of Ukrainian refugees, something that is a clear sign of independence.”

    He accused the government of a politically motived effort “to rid the country of independent institutions.”

    Separately, the government has undertaken criminal proceedings against numerous individual UOC clerics, accusing them of collaborating with Russia or similar charges.

    Schism and war

    About 70% of Ukrainians are Orthodox, according to a 2024 survey by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology.

    Only a small number of them identified with the UOC, although the survey described it as part of the Moscow Patriarchate, a label it disputes. The UOC still operates many parishes and monasteries in Ukraine.

    Most of the Orthodox surveyed said they identified with a rival jurisdiction, the similarly named Orthodox Church of Ukraine. It received recognition as an independent church in 2019 from Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople.

    Although Bartholomew is considered first among equals among Orthodox patriarchs, he lacks the Catholic Church’s papal-like authority. Moscow has furiously disputed his right to recognize a church on what it considers its territory. Russian leaders have even cited this schism, and the U.S. support for the new church, as helping provoke the current war.

    The head of the DESS, Viktor Yelensky, said in a news conference Tuesday that individual parishes could make their own decisions about affiliation. He said the action is not about religious doctrine but about affiliation with an aggressor state. “Nobody has asked them to refuse their religious beliefs,” he said.

    The long-simmering dispute over the UOC has played a role in debates over U.S. aid to Ukraine, particularly with the new administration of President Donald Trump taking a more skeptical view toward such aid. Opponents of aiding Ukraine have accused it of repressing religious freedom.

    The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom in 2024 raised concerns about the law banning Moscow-affiliated religious groups, but it emphasized that “Russia remains the most profound threat to religious freedom in Ukraine,” with repression taking place in occupied areas of Ukraine.

    A 2024 report by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights also criticized the law, saying it could “result in entire religious communities being held responsible for the conduct of specific individuals.” It also cited Russian restrictions on religious freedom in occupied areas, targeting such groups as Catholics, Muslims and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

    Controversies involving the war have affected Orthodox communities within the United States, such as with an Alaska archbishop’s controversial meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in August.

    ___

    Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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