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Crimée: brutal anti-oecuménisme russe poue les grecs-catholiques
par Presbu 2014-03-28 14:27:46
Imprimer Imprimer

sur le Catholic Herald :Priest: Ukrainian Catholics flee Crimea to escape threats of arrest
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By Jonathan Luxmoore on Tuesday, 25 March 2014
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<Ukrainian pastor released after being seized from church>
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<Ukrainian Catholics fear ‘new oppression’ after Russian takeover
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Father Milchakovskyi said that he and his family and at least two-thirds of his parishioners have left for Ukrainian-controlled territory on the advice of Archbishop Shevchuk (pictured above) (CNS)
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Members of the Ukrainian Catholic Church are fleeing Crimea to escape threats of arrest and property seizures, a priest has said.
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“The situation remains very serious, and we don’t know what will happen — the new government here is portraying us all as nationalists and extremists,” said Father Mykhailo Milchakovskyi, a parish rector and military chaplain from Kerch, Crimea, who was speaking to the Catholic News Service just four days after Russia finalised the region’s annexation.
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He said that officials from Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB, had called him in for questioning about his community and to ask whether he “recognised the new order.”
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Father Milchakovskyi said that he and his family and at least two-thirds of his parishioners had left Kerch for Ukrainian-controlled territory on the advice of Ukrainian Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk of Kiev-Halych.
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“All my parishioners are patriotic Ukrainians who love their Crimean homeland. But Russia is now seeking to drive us out,” he said on Tuesday.
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He said Father Mykola Kvych, pastor of the Dormition of the Mother of God Parish in Sevastopol, Crimea, also fled after being detained and beaten by Russian forces, who accused him of “sponsoring extremism and mass unrest.”
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“During 10 years in Sevastopol, he never said or did anything against Russians,” Father Milchakovskyi added.
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“We’re determined our Church will not close up and abandon its mission, and we hope we’ll be given permits to return. But like others, we’ve had to leave our life and work behind, not knowing when we’ll be back. This is a time of suffering and anxiety.
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“For now, this is just a temporary evacuation until conditions are safer, but with tension and pressure now strong, many of us are afraid of being arrested. People want things to stay as they are, with freedom of religion, assembly and speech. But if they’re forced to accept Russian passports, they’ll have little choice. Our only hope lies with God and human goodwill.”
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The Ukrainian Catholic Church, a Byzantine rite, was outlawed under Soviet rule from 1946 to 1989, when many clergy were imprisoned and most church properties seized by the state or transferred to Russian Orthodox possession.
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The Church’s five communities in Crimea traditionally make up around 10 percent of the peninsula’s 1.96 million inhabitants, 58 percent of whom are ethnic Russians. Ukrainians make up 24 percent and mostly Muslim Tartars a further 12 percent.
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Father Milchakovskyi said that Crimea’s Russian Orthodox Church appeared ready to seize Ukrainian Catholic properties and said all but one Catholic priest and deacon had now left to escape “interest from the FSB and Russian forces.”
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In a March 19 letter to Ukrainian Catholic clergy in Crimea and neighbouring Odessa, Archbishop Shevchuk said he was aware many priests now faced “inconveniences, pressures and threats” with their families, adding that he hoped they would have “bravery and courage, steadfastness and strength” to continue their work.
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“To carry on your service, you will have to overcome impediments which, until very recently, were hard for any of us to imagine. You are being called ‘Vatican agents’ and are being solicited to renounce the Catholic Church,” the archbishop said.
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“These attacks are nothing new. In them we trace an echo of everything our martyr-Church experienced in the not-so-distant Communist past,” he said. “However, we know God’s providence turned into good those repressions and persecutions.”
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Meanwhile, Ukrainian newspapers said two Byzantine Catholic churches and a monastery had been burned between March 15 and 26 in Ivano-Frankivsk, Dora and Kolomyya, adding that the current crisis could severely damage Catholic-Orthodox ties.
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Father Milchakovskyi said he hoped Russian Orthodox leaders would be “interested in maintaining religious freedom” in Crimea, but added that Ukrainian Catholics now had “no wish for contacts with them.”
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“We don’t trust them — they’re unfriendly, imperialistic people, who are being helped by the FSB and who’ll want the new order to ensure their religious monopoly,” the priest said.
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 Crimée: brutal anti-oecuménisme russe poue les grecs-catholiques par Presbu  (2014-03-28 14:27:46)
      Avis aux naïfs qui imaginent... par Vianney  (2014-03-28 15:52:27)
      rien hélas de neuf ... par Luc Perrin  (2014-03-28 16:01:32)
          nuance par Ignacio  (2014-03-28 16:10:14)
              oh les "néo-nazis" ... comme c'est par Luc Perrin  (2014-03-28 16:36:36)
          Poutine, héraut de la Chrétienté ou prince de Babylone ? par Athanase  (2014-03-28 16:23:30)
          Poutine aura (peut-être) flingué les niaiseries du dialogue orthodoxe-catholiq [...] par Athanase  (2014-03-28 16:28:37)
              les Orthodoxes et les Orientaux ne se résument pas par Luc Perrin  (2014-03-28 16:49:01)
                  En 50 ans de dialogue catholique-orthodoxe, le bilan est négatif ! par Athanase  (2014-03-28 17:26:59)
      Doit-on soutenir les nazis de Kiev par Bertrand  (2014-03-28 16:31:24)
          décidément le FSB est actif par Luc Perrin  (2014-03-28 16:42:28)
              vendre l'image du nouveau tsar ? par jejomau  (2014-03-28 17:54:41)
                  Ils sont partout par Rémi  (2014-03-28 19:18:05)
              Et pourtant par Aigle  (2014-03-28 18:14:07)
                  Oui Aigle ! par Jean-Paul PARFU  (2014-03-28 18:28:43)
                      éviter la guerre par Mingdi  (2014-03-28 19:08:28)
                          la seule différence par jejomau  (2014-03-28 19:40:30)
                              considérations stratégiques par Mingdi  (2014-03-28 23:33:35)
                      En fin de compte, il me semble... par Pol  (2014-03-28 21:13:50)
              Je me méfie de Poutine par Ritter  (2014-03-28 20:35:01)
          ou doit-on en soutenir d'autres ? par Vassilissa  (2014-03-28 21:19:40)
      Attention à l'enfumage de la presse par Ritter  (2014-03-28 20:41:29)
      Pas si simple... par Rodolphe  (2014-03-28 21:24:45)
          Pas si complexe par Aigle  (2014-03-28 21:42:56)


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