The victims are calling all the Orthodox to protest the “sacrilege undertaking of the Ukrainian authorities.”
The police also tore down the tent chapel of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP), which had stood in the park in front of the parliament for six years.
The tent chapel was erected in front of the parliament in 2005, when as a result of a conflict in the village of Rokhmaniv, Ternopil Oblast, part of the parish transferred to the Kyivan Patriarchate and assumed the only village church and the other part led by its senior priest, Oleh Sirko, remained faithful to the UOC-MP and came to Kyiv to seek justice.
For a long time, the chapel of Fr. Oleh served as one of the key centers of “political Orthodoxy.” Representatives of the Orthodox brotherhoods of the UOC-MP used to gather here to discuss their activity.
According to the victims, during the pogrom, “icons were thrown out, the nearby tent Church of St. Oleksandr Nevskyi was dismantled and desecrated. Everything was demolished by a bulldozer and the parishioners’ shrines were crushed into the ground and there is an even surface now in the place of the church, which has been covered with artificial turf. It is an awful sacrilege, which reminds one of the 30s of the last century when destruction of churches, persecutions of believers was part of the state policy,” say the victims.
The dismantling began at night and the dispersal continued in the morning. According to an eye witness, all the active participants of the defense of the tents were transported somewhere. They twisted people’s arms and prevented them from praying. Priests and parishioners lay down in front of the vehicles but were dispersed by force.
The victims are calling all the Orthodox to protest the “sacrilege undertaking of the Ukrainian authorities.”
Interfax-Religion reports with reference to the local authorities that the cause of the destruction was “unsanitary conditions.”