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Between Moseow and Rome:

Struggle for the Greek Catholie


Patriarchate in Ukraine
SERHII PLOKHY

W h e n Kiril Lakota, the central figure of the award-winning film


based on Morris West's bestseller, The Shoes of the Fishervuzn, was
released from the Soviet Gulag and came to Rome, he was elected

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pope. When Joseph Slipyi (1892-1984), archbishop of Ukrainian Greek
Catholic Church and prototype of Lakota, was released from the Gulag
by Nikita Khrushchev in 1963, he carne to Rome to proclaim himself
patriarch of Kiev and Halych. ~
The idea of a Kievan patriarchate under the jurisdiction of Rome
first appeared in the 1580s, on the eve of the ecclesiastical union of the
Kiev Orthodox metropolitanate with Rome. 2 The union was concluded

9 SERHII PLOKHY (Diploma, Dnipropetrovsk State University; Candidate of Sciences


(historiography) . P Lumumba
. . . Universitty
. . Moscow.
. Ph D Kiev State University) is cur-
rently a research associate at the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of
A]berta. He is author of Papacy and Ukraine'. Vatican Policy in Ukrainian Lancls in the
Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (in Russian) and coauthor of History of the Church and
Religious Thought in Ukraine (in Ukrainian). His articles have appeared in Canadian Sla-
vonic Papers, Journal of Ukrainian Studies, and Ukrainian Historical Journal. Special inter-
ests include history of the papacy, and church-state relations in Ukraine and Russia.

1. According to the publisher, Morris L. West's book, The Shoes of the Fisherman (New
York: Wil]iam Morrow and Company, 1963), was written between March 1961 and August
1962, before Archbishop S]ipyi's release from Soviet imprisonment in January 1963. The
name of the central figure of West's book, Kiril Lakota, is based on the name of Hryhorii
Lakota (1883-1950), the Greek Catholic auxiliary bishop of Przemygl (Peremysh]) who was
imprisoned in 1946 and died in the Gulag. See Osyp Zinkevych and Rey. Taras R. Lonchyna,
eds., Martyrology of the Ukrainian Churches. Vol. 2: The Ukrainian Catholic Church. Docu-
ments, Materials, Christian Samvydav from Ukraine (Toronto-Baltimore: Smoloskyp, 1985),
105, 325-31.
On Slipyi's arrival in the West in 1963 and the reaction of the world press to his release
from the Gulag, see Milena Rudnycka, Nevydymi Styhmaty (Rome-Munich-Philadelphia:
Society for Promotion of the Patriarchal System in the Ukrainian Catholic Church, 1971.)
On Slipyi's activities, see Jaroslav Pelikan, Confessor Between East and West: A Portrait of
Ukrainian Cardinal Josyf Slipyj (Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 1990).
2. On the history of the idea of the patriarchate in early modern Ukraine, see Oscar
Halecki, From Florence to Brest (1439-1596), 2nd ed. (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books,
1968), 215-18; Jan Krajcar, "The Ruthenian Patriarchate: Some Remarks on the Project for
Its Establishment in the 17th Century," Orientalia Christiana Periodica 30 (1964): 65-84;
D. Tanczuk, "Questio patriarchatus Kioviensis tempore conaminum Unionis Ruthenorum
850 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE

in Rome in 1595, and the Uniate Church, founded at its Council in


Brest in 1596, later became known as the Ukrainian Greek Catholic or
Ukrainian Catholic Church. Although the idea of a Greek Catholic pa-
triarchate has existed since the seventeenth century, it has never been
realized. The forcible liquidation of the Church by the Soviet authori-
ties after World War II, which left approximately one million Ukrainian
Catholics in the Western diaspora without their traditional religious
center and their hierarchs without their titular territory, was a major
setback for the idea of the patriarchate. 3 Nevertheless, the 1960s and
1970s witnessed a growing movement in the Ukrainian diaspora for the
creation of a Catholic patriarchate.

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In 1963, Joseph Slipyi raised the issue of the Ukrainian patriarchate
in his speech at the Second Vatican Council and later built a strong
movement in support of patriarchal status for the Church among his
flock. A number of factors contributed to the success of Slipyi's propa-
ganda. Firstly, the nationalistically minded UkrainŸ diaspora wanted
its dispersed eparchies to be united into one national Catholic Church.
Secondly, Vatican II recognized the right of the Eastern Catholic
Churches to preserve their distinct character, and the Ukrainian Catho-
lic diaspora, with more than a million faithful, felt itself discriminated
against without a patriarchate of its own when the significantly smaller
Eastern Catholic Churches, such as the Coptic, Syrian, and Armenian,
had their own patriarchates. 4

(1582-1632)," Analecta Ordinis S. Basilii Magni, I (VII) (1949): 128-46; and Hryhor M.
Luznycky, "The Quest for the Patriarchate in the Past of the Ukrainian Church," in The
Quest for an Ukrainian Catholic Patriarchate, eds. Victor J. Pospishil and Hryhor M.
Luznycky (Philadelphia, Penn.: Ukrainian Publications, 1971), 32-43.
3. On the liquidation of the Greek Catholic Church by the Soviet authorities in 1945-1949,
see Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, "The Suppression of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in
Postwar Soviet Union and Poland," in Religion and NationaIism in Eastern Union and the
Soviet Union, ed. Dennis J. Dunn (Boulder, Colo.: Westview, 1987), 97-119; Denis Dir-
scherl, "The Soviet Destruction of the Greek Catholic Church," Journal of Church and State
12 (Autumn 1970): 421-39; and Serhii Plokhy, "In the Shadow of Yalta: International Politics
and the Soviet Liquidation of the Greco-Catholic Church," Logos: A JournaI of Eastern
Christian Studies 35 (1994): 59-76.
4. On the issue of the patriarchate, see Victor j. Pospishil's articles, "An Autonomous
Ukrainian Catholic Church," "Towards a Ukrainian Catholic Patriarchate," "In the Wake of a
Rejection," and "A Summary View of the Problem of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in the
Light of the Principles of Canon Law," in The Questfor an Ukrainian Catholic Patriarchate,
eds. Pospishil and Luznycky, 7-31, 43-74; Joharmes Madey, Das Zweite Vatikanische Konzil
und die Revision des Rechtes der Ostkirchen (Rome: Bohosloviia, 1978); J. Madey, Le pa-
triarchat ukrainien vers la perfection de l'› juridique actuel (Rome: Pratsi Ukrainskoho
Bohoslovskoho Tovarystva, 1971); George A. Maloney, S.J., "The Present Canonical Status
of the Ukrainian Catholic Church and Its Future," in Archiepiscopal and Patriarchal Auton-
omy, eds. Thomas E. Bird and Eva Piddubcheshen (New York: Fordham University, 1972),
44-56; and Meletius Michael Wojnar, "Proiekt konstytutsii Patriarkhatu Ukrainskoi Tserkvy,"
Bohosloviia 34 (1970): 5-39.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 851
Joseph Slipyi proclaimed himself patriarch of Kiev and Halych in
1974. Although he never achieved his ultimate goal, the recognition of
the patriarchate by Rome, his devotion to the cause brought results. 5 In
1980 John Paul II recognized the Synod of Ukrainian Bishops, created
by Slipyi as part of the patiŸ structure, asa legitimate body. This
more by the new pope provoked a strong negative reaction on the part
of the Moscow pat¡ and not only threatened the ecumenical
dialogue that the Vatican was trying to establish with Moscow, but also
made Vatican-Soviet relations even more difficult and unpredictable. 6

THE CHALLENGE OF THE NATIONAL IDEA

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The restoration of the independent Ukrainian state in 1991 gave an
impulse both to the patriarehal movement among Greek Catholies and
to the autoeephalous movement in the Orthodox Chureh. Both of these
movements had been inspired by the development of Ukrainian na-
tional ideology throughout the twentieth eentury. Thus, the aehieve-
ment of the main goal of the national movement--the ereation of an
independent state--inevitably brought to the Chureh's agenda the task
of aehieving maximum independenee in Church affairs as well. In the
case of the Orthodox Chureh sueh independenee eould be aeeom-
plished by the granting of autoeephaly for the Chureh; in the case of
the Catholic Church, so long as there could not be a separate Catholic
Church beyond the jurisdiction of Rome, the creation of an Eastern-
¡ Catholic patriarchate in Ukraine has been viewed as a possible
solution.
At the time of the liquidation of the Greek Catholic Church by the
Soviet authorities in 1945-46, the Church was closely linked to the
Ukrainian national movement. The legalization of the Church in 1989
was also closely connected to the acceleration of the Ukrainian national
movement during the perestroika years. Nevertheless, the national
character of the Greek Catholic Church very soon was severely chal-
lenged by its newly emerged rival--the Ukrainian Autocephalous Or-

5. On Cardinal Slipyi's struggle for the recognition of the patriarchate, see Jaroslav Pe-
likan, Confessor Between East and West, 190-215; and Russel P. Moroziuk, Politics of a
Union (Montreal: McGill University Press, 1983).
6. On the role of the "Uniate" factor in Vatican-Moscow relations, see Hahsjakob Stehle,
Eastern PolŸ of the Vatican, 1917-1979 (Athens, Oh.: Ohio University Press, 1981); Rus-
sel P. Moroziuk, Politicized Ecumenism: Rome, Moscow and the Ukrainian Church (Mon-
treal: Virginia Nixon, 1984); Alexis U. Flofidi, S.J., "The Role of Ukraine in Recent Soviet-
Vatican Diplomacy," in Archiepiscopal and Patriarchal Autonomy, eds. Bird and Pid-
dubcheshen, 61-70; Ivan Hvat, The Catacomb Church and Pope John Paul II (Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Ukrainian Studies Fund, 1985); and Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, "The
Ukrainian Catholic Church in the USSR under Gorbachev," Problems of Communism 39
(November-December 1990): 1-19.
852 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE
thodox Church. The adherents of the latter emphasized the fact of the
complete independence of their Church at a time when, by contrast,
Greek Catholics were dependent on decisions coming from Rome.
They also argued that the 1596 Union of Brest, of which the Greek
Catholic Church was the major product, was introduced in Ukraine in
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries by force and that the highly
praised Zaporozhian Cossacks defended Orthodoxy against a Uniate of-
fensive. The proclamation of patriarchal status for the Ukrainian Auto-
cephalous Orthodox Church in June 1990 undermined the Ukrainian
Catholic Church's claim to be the only truly national church. The
Church has since found itself on the defensive and was forced to accel-

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erate its struggle for the recognition of its patriarchal status.
The struggle for the Greek Catholic pat¡ in Ukraine has
been significantly influenced by three major factors: the development
of the patriarchal movement within the Church, the Vatican's attitude
toward the idea of a Ukrainian patriarchate and, last but not least, the
state's policy toward Greek Catholics in an independent Ukraine.

1992 Lviv SYNOD

The legalization of the Greek Catholic Church in Ukraine that took


place in late 1989 with significant support from the Vatican, especially
Pope John Paul II personally, strengthened the pro-pat¡ faction
within the Ukrainian Catholic Church. The main canonical obstacle in
the way to the Greek Catholic patriarchate--the absence of any titular
territory under the jurisdiction of the patriarch--ceased to exist with
the restoration of Church structures in Ukraine.
The patriotic sentiments of the Church's adherents in Ukraine, who
used to see the Church as the vehicle of Ukrainian national ideology,
and who desired to strengthen the Church's national image, found le-
gitimacy in the patriarchal movement, born and shaped in the Ukrain-
ian diaspora. Two currents, one coming from Ukraine, another from
abroad, met one another in the desire to create the patriarchal struc-
tures of the Greek Catholic Church.
In May 1992 the unique opportunity to demonstrate the strength of
the pat¡ movement carne with the convening of the Synod of the
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. For the first time it was convoked in
Ukraine and took place in Lviv, the titular city of the Metropolitan, in
May 1992. The synod, attended by the Vatican's first nuncio in
Ukraine, Archbishop Antonio Franco, created the main bodies of the
patriarchate, including the Patriarchal Curia and the Permanent Synod
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 853

of Bishops, and asked the Vatican not so much to create the patriarch-
ate as to recognize the patriarchal structures that already existed. 7
Except for the question of the patriarchate, there were other deci-
sions of the synod that were of special importance for the Church. The
synod requested to put under the jurisdiction of the Greek Catholic
pat¡ the Peremyshl (Przemy~l) eparchy in Poland and to
subordinate to the Lviv see the Greek Catholic eparchy of Trans-
carpathia. There were also propositions to create Greek Catholic epar-
chies in eastern Ukraine and in Russia. All of the synod's requests had
never been made public, but the program of the patriarchal faction of
the Church has been expressed by its members on a number of occa-

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sions. One of them, Rey. Dr. Mykhailo Dymyd, believes that the Kiev-
Halych patriarchate should be comprised of the four metropolies--
those of Kiev, Lviv, Peremyshl and Uzhhorod--and seven exarch-
ates--three in Ukraine, Kharldv, Odessa, Donetsk, and four beyond
the Ukrainian borders, within the territory of the former USSR, the
exarchates of Belarus, Russia, Siberia and Asia.s The synod also
presented candidates for consecration as bishops. All requests and pro-
positions were send to Rome for approval. 9
Rome's reluctance to provide answers to the requests of the synod
provoked a negative reaction on the part of the Church and forced its
head, Myroslav ][van Cardinal Liubachivsky, to make a special state-
ment on the matter. In the "Appeal to the Greek Catholics of Ukraine
and the Settlements" of 15 February 1993, he called his flock to pray
that the decisions of the Synod of Lviv, and especially one on the Kiev-
Halych patriarchate, be promulgated and confirmed by the Roman au-
thorities. He also criticized those who considered the very existence of
the Greek Catholic Church to be the obstacle toward improving Ortho-
dox-Catholic relations. In that manner he expressed his deep concern
over the latest developments in Vatican Eastern policy and attacked
those influential circles within the Vatican that wanted to victimize the
Ukrainian Catholic Church in Ihvor of Roman Catholicism. He com-
plained that the Greek Catholic Church had been put in this unfavora-
ble position when it had to prove its right to create eparchies in
Ukraine, when the Roman Catholics did not have problems of that kind
at all. He stressed that the jurisdiction of the Church had to be ex-
panded not only to the territory of Transcarpathia and eastern Ukraine,

7. Press releases, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 27


May and 2 June 1992.
8. Mykhailo Dymyd, "Hreko-katolyky: stanovlennia pislia katakomb," Holos Ukrainy, 3
November 1992.
9. Press release, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 27
May 1992.
854 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE
but far beyond the state borders of Ukrainemto all the territo¡ of
the former USSR, wherever the Ukrainian Catholics had settled, lo
There is little doubt that Myroslav Ivan Liubachivsky, who has been
generally known for his loyalty to the Vatican and personally to the
pope, was forced to express his dissatisfaction with the Vatican's policy
of delay by the growing discontent of his flock. Two scandals that
shocked the Church in early 1993 have shown how high the tension
within the Church has been. One of these scandals took place in
Ukraine and was related to the leader of the clandestine Greek Catho-
lic Church, Archbishop Volodymyr Sterniuk, and the other ocurred
abroad, in Canada, caused by the Vatican's appointment of the apos-

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tolic administrator for the Toronto eparchy.

DISCONTENT IN UKRAINE
The scandal that involved Archbishop Sterniuk started in January
1993, when the newspaper News from Ukraine published an article by
Nestor Hodovany-Stone, a former Greek Catholic priest, who eventu-
ally converted to Orthodoxy. The article, entitled "'A Prisoner of Mount
St. George," claimed that the former leader of the clandestine church
in Ukraine and martyr for the faith, Archbishop Volodymyr Sterniuk,
had been under the surveillance of the people who came from Rome
together with Cardinal Liubachivsky and in reality was a p¡ of the
Vatican in the metropolitan's residence at St. George's Hill in Lviv.
Reportedly Sterniuk had dictated to the author of the article a state-
ment to the Ukrainian people in which he expressed his desire for unity
with the Autocephalous Orthodox Church in Ukraine. The statement
said: "If my brother Orthodox Metropolitans in Kiev unite, I would be
willing to unite with them to form one Ukrainian Church of Christ
under one pastor. By this I understand n o t a Uniate Church, but a
Unity of Churches in one general, Holy, Apostolic Orthodox Church. T M
Though the unity with the Orthodox Church in Ukraine fora long pe-
riod of time is being proclaimed as an ultimate goal of the Greek Cath-
olic Church by its leadership, the reaction on the part of the Church
authorities was very sharp. The chancellor of the Lviv archeparchy,
Rev. Ivan Datsko, met with journalists to make public the new state-
ment of Metropolitan Sterniuk in which he denied the fact that he ever
was "the prisoner of Mount St. George" and confirmed his loyalty to
Cardinal Liubachivsky and the pope. 12
10. Svoboda, 2 Ap¡ 1992.
11. Fr. Nestor Hodovany-Stone, "A Prisoner of Mount St. George," Newsfrom Ukraine,
January 1993.
12. Yaroslav Melnychuk, "la vnov zaiavliaiu o svoiei vernosti Ioannu Pavlu II, Pape Rim-
skomu," Pravda Ukrainy, 25 February 1993.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 855

It was symptomatic that Metropolitan Sterniuk did not take part in


the press conference and never denied a single word of his original
statement. Even more, in his statement, sent to the editor of News
from Ukraine, Metropolitan Sterniuk quoted the letter of 1942 by Met-
ropolitan Andrei Sheptytsky, the unchallenged authority to all Greek
Catholics, in which he stated that the Kievan metropolitan should be
elected from among the Autocephalous Orthodox bishops or priests
and in the case of his unity with the Universal Church the Greek
Catholics should recognize bis autho¡ l*
Due to the fact that the word Orthodox had been used to define
the Catholic Church in the first six centuries after Christ and both

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churches define themselves as catholic (universal) and orthodox (true),
the usage of the words Union, Unity, Universal, Catholic, and Ortho-
dox in different combinations gives to the Greek Catholic clergy the
possibility to preserve their formal loyalty to the Vatican and at the
same time to rebel against its authority.
The publication of Sterniuk's proclamation provoked a strong reac-
tion on the part of the Church autho¡ first due chiefly to the grow-
ing tensions between different factions within the Church. It was not
the first time that the archbishop created problems for the Church au-
thorities and the Vatican. Ir happened the first time in 1990, during the
proceedings of the quadri-partite commission of Vatican, Moscow,
Ukrainian Orthodox, and Greek Catholic representatives in Lviv. At
that time Sterniuk left one of the proceedings of the commission in
protest against attempts of the Vatican representatives to make a deal
with Moscow at the expense of the Greek Catholic Church.
For many Church members Archbishop Sterniuk serves as a sym-
bol of the most radically oriented part of the Church--of clandestine
bishops, priests, and monks, for whom their struggle for the legalization
of the Church under Soviet rule was closely connected to the struggle
for the liberation of Ukraine, and who see in the patriarchal structure
of the Church the fu]fillment of not only their religious but also their
national aspirations. This position has substantial support among politi-
cally active laymen. It was their protests that enabled the Vatican to
force Sterniuk to resign in 1991, and it was these activists who in May
1992, during the proceedings of the Church synod, issued and distrib-

13. Visti z Ukrainy, 25 February - 3 March 1993. On the life and activities of Metropolitan
Andrei Sheptytsky, see Cyrille Korolevskij, M› Andr› Szeptyckyj 1865-1944 (Rome,
1964); and Morality and ReaIity: The Life and Times of Andrei Sheptytsky, ed. Paul R.
Magosci with the assistance of Andrii Krawchuk (Edmonton: Canadian Institute of Ukrain-
ian Studies, 1989).
856 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE
uted leaflets all over Lviv with the slogan Our Patriarch is VoIodymyr
Sterniuk. 14
By the beginning of 1993, the Greek Catholic clergy in Ukraine had
been composed of approximately five hundred clergymen who oper-
ated in the underground before 1990, four hundred priests who con-
verted from Orthodoxy after the legalization of the Church, and forty
individuals who came from the diaspora, ls The latter have occupied the
leading positions in the government of the Church, as well as domi-
nated its scholarly system and kept all links with the Vatican in their
hands. Former clandestine priests who did not receive the proper theo-
logical education and have been extremely nationalistic in their orienta-

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tion often come in conflict with both clergy sent from abroad and
former Orthodox priests.
During the proceedings of the Second Church Synod, held in Lviv
in February 1994, tensions mounted between the diaspora clergy,
which did not want to accept Ukrainian citizenship, and the local
priests. A group of Greek Catholic faithful demonstrated near the walls
of St. George's Cathedral where the synod was taking place, protesting
against the control of Church affairs by foreigners. One of their slogans
was: "Lviv is for Galicians, not for overseas dealers. ''~6

REBELLION IN THE DIASVORA


The pressure on the Church leadership in matters of the patriarchal
status for the Church has mounted with events outside of Ukraine--in
Canada, where the p¡ and laymen of the Toronto eparchy have
expressed strong protest against the Vatican's interference in the affairs
of the eparchy. In Toronto, Rome forcibly introduced its law on the
retirement of Catholic bishops who reached seventy-five years of age.
As lar as the Greek Catholic Church was concerned, this law affected,
first of all, the Australian exarchate, the Winnipeg metropoly, and the
Toronto eparchy in Canada. In Winnipeg and Melbourne the replace-
ment of the old bishops took place almost smoothly, but this was not
the case in Toronto, where the eparchial bishop, Isidore Borecky, re-
fused to resign. His stand was supported by the majo¡ of the
eparchial clergy and lay activists. Borecky and his eparchy have been
known for decades as a stronghold of the patriarchal movement, and

14. Press release, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 27
May 1992.
15. Rev. Ivan Datsko, "Suchasnyi stan Ukrainskoi Hreko-Katolytskoi Tserkvy," Ukrainska
Dumka, 4 February 1993.
16. See Kost Chavaga, "Synod UHKTs," Shliakh peremohy, 6 March 1994; Klymentyna
Darmohrai, "Druhyi synod u Lvovi vidbuvsia u nezatyshnii obstanovtsi," Ukraina f svit, 2-8
March 1994.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 857

the bishop was also a champion of the preservation of Eastern tradi-


tions in his eparchy and performed ordinations of married men to the
priesthood. 17
The Lviv 1992 Synod, taking into account the law on retirement,
asked the Vatican to appoint an auxiliary bishop to help Borecky in his
eparchy, but the Vatican had appointed on 29 December 1992 an apos-
tolic administrator. The wave of discontent mounted partly because of
the personality of Rome's appointee, Rey. Roman Danyliak, who was
known for his negative attitude toward the patriarchal movement. "The
person who has been named to this appointment, moreover, is one who
is widely regarded within the Ukrainian Catholic community as one

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who himself does not respect the integrity and particularity of the
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church"--stressed a May 1992 statement by
the Etobicoke Group Coalition of Concerned Canadian Catholics.ls
The tensions in the eparchy appeared to be so high that Rome was
forced to send to Toronto Bishop Michael Hrynchyshyn, the exarch of
the Ukrainian Catholics in France and Benelux, to help implement the
Vatican's will in the eparchy. 19 Thus, the Vatican's move against the
well known partisan of the patriarchal status for the Ukrainian Catholic
Church reached an opposite result and intensified the whole move-
ment. Not only the adherents of the patriarchate in Canada but also the
Ukrainian Patriarchal Society in the USA carne forward with their pro-
tests against the Vatican policy. Angry anti-Vatican articles and state-
ments appeared in the Ukrainian Press of North America. "It's time to
consider an independent Ukrainian Church" stated one of the letters
quoted in the editorial of The Ukrainian Weekly, the most respected
English-language Ukrainian periodical in the USA.2o
The crisis within the Toronto eparchy deteriorated with a rumor
that a decision had been made by the Vatican authorities to limit the
jurisdiction of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church to three Galician
oblasts: Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, and Ternopil; to elevate the Mukachiv
eparchy to the status of metropoly and to put it under the direct juris-

17. Andrii Wynnyckyj, "Furor Erupts in Toronto Eparchy as Rome Makes Move Against
Bishop," The Ukrainian Weekly, 31 January 1993.
18. Press release, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 5
May 1993.
19. See Andrij Wynnyckyj's interviews with Bishop Michael Hrynchyshyn: "Bishop
Hrynchyshyn Speaks on the Controversy in Toronto," The Ukrainian Weekly, 4 April 1993;
and "Bishop Hrynchyshyn on Dangers Facing Ukrainian Catholic Church," The Ukrainian
$Veekly, 11 Apfil 1993.
20. Editorial, "The Ukrainian Catholic Church Must Listen to Its Own Voice," The
Ukrainian Weekly, 7 March 1993; see also article by Myron Kuropas, the newspaper's col-
umnist and former aide to USA President Gerald Ford, "Rome Just Doesn't Get It," The
Ukrainian Weekly, 14 March 1993.
858 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE

diction of Rome; to put the Greek Catholic parishes beyond the bor-
ders of Galicia under the jurisdiction of Roman-Catholic bishops; and
finally, to prohibit the ordination of married clergyY
In September 1993 the New CathoIic Times informed its readers
that Isidore Borecky had visited the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constan-
tinople, Bartholomew I. The patriarch reportedly supported the cause
of the Greek Catholic patriarchate and promised to raise the issue of
Borecky's removal from the Toronto eparchy in his talks with the
pope. ~ The patriarch's desire "to be much closer to the Ukrainian Or-
thodox and the Greek Catholics in Ukraine," allegedly expressed by
him during the meeting with Borecky, contained a potential threat to

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both Moscow and Rome. In fact, Borecky managed to bring a new
actor on the scene. The patriarchate of Constantinople has been in-
volved in centuries-long conflict with Moscow for ju¡ over the
Kiev metropolitanate and leadership of the entire Orthodox world. 23

VATICAN POLITICS

In May 1991, on his trip to the USA, Archbishop Volodymyr


Sterniuk spoke about the consecration of the Greek Catholic bishops
for Belarus and Russia.24 Very soon, however, the initial optimism of
the leader of the clandestine Church made way for deep concern over

21. For the character of the rumors, see And¡ Wynnyckyj's interviews with Bishop
Michael Hrynchyshyn in The Ukrainian Weekly, 4, 11 April 1993, and the appeal of the
Ukrainian Patriarchal Society in the USA in The Ukrainian Weekly, 21 March 1993.
22. See Louise Slobodian, "Ukrainian Catholic Bishop Brings Toronto Struggle to Istan-
bul," Pravoslavnyi Visnyk, November 1993.
23. In his concludŸ remarks at the meeting, the pat¡ reportedly said, "I wish you to
always remember if you wish to return to the Church from whence you carne, you will
always be welcome and if you wish to remain where you are, we wish to be your good
friends, as we respect and love you" (Louise Slobodian, "Ukrainian Catholic Bishop").
On the issue of the Constantinople-Moscow fivalry over the Kievan metropolitanate, see
N. Chubaty, "Moscow and the Ukrainian Church after 1654," Ukrainian Quarterly 10
(1954): 60-71; S. Ternovskii, "Issledovanie o podchinenii Kievskoi mitropolii Moskovskomu
patriarkhatu," Arkhiv Iugo-Zapadnoi Rossii (Kiev: Vremennaia komissia dlia razbora
drevnikh aktov, 1872), 1: 5: 1-172; H. Udod, Pryiednannia Ukrainskoi Tserkvy do Moskov-
skoho patriiarkhatu 1686 roku (Winnipeg, 1972); M. Zazykin, Autokefalia i zasady jej zas-
tosowania (Warsaw, 1931); Suzanne Gwen Hruby, Leslie Laszlo, and Stephan K.
Pawlowitch, "Minor Orthodox Churches of Eastern Europe," in Eastern Christianity and
Politics in the Twentieth Century, ed. Pedro Ramet (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press,
1988), 321-30.
The issue of the Toronto eparchy was discussed at the Church synod held in Lviv in
February 1994. Reportedly, the synod recommended that Bishop Borecky resign and
Bishop Danyliak be moved to another eparchy. It seems that both bishops ignored these
recommendations. See Klymentyna Darmohrai, "Druhyi synod u Lvovi vidbuvsia u
nezatyshnii obstanovtsi," Ukraina i svit, 2-8 March 1994.
24. Roma Hadzevych, "Archbishop Volodymyr Stemiuk Describes Legal Status of Ukrain-
ian Catholic Church," The Ukrainian Weekly, 9 May 1991.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 859

the future of Ukrainian Catholic Church. For Russia and other former
Soviet republics, the pope ordained not Greek Catholic but Roman
Catholic bishops. The same had happened with central and eastern
Ukraine. The Greek Catholic pa¡ in neighboring Poland remained
under the jurisdiction of the primate of the Polish Roman Catholic
Church. Also, the question of subordination of the Greek Catholic ep-
archy in Transcarpathia to the Lviv metropolitan see has remained
unresolved.
Many of the current problems in the relations between the Vatican
and Ukrainian Catholics have their origins in previous conflicts and
misunderstandings between the two sides that date back to the 1960s

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and the 1970s. Today, as before, the issues of the recognition of
Ukrainian Catholic patriarchate and preservation of the Eastern tradi-
tions of the Ukrainian Catholic Church largely depend on the provi-
sions of Vatican policy toward Moscow. z5 While the restoration of
Ukrainian independence in 1991 changed a ]ot in world politics, ir
brought little, if any, change to the Vatican's approach toward the
problems of ecumenical dialogue. It has been understood in the Vati-
can that Ukraine is no longer a part of the USSR and issues that are of
vital importance for the Catholic Churches in Ukraine have to be de-
cided not in Moscow but in Kiev. At the same time, there has been
little understanding of the fact that the Moscow patriarchate has lost
almost all of its parishes in western Ukraine and has been preoccupied
more with the Orthodox autocephaly in all of Ukraine than with the
threat of the Uniate offensive in Galicia.
Even before the formal legalization of the Greek Catholic Church
in Ukraine, in the course of negotiations between the representatives of
the Vatican and Moscow pat¡ in January 1989, both sides
agreed that the union could not be considered an appropriate form of
Christian unity and that they should make way for the ecumenical dia-
logue between the two Churches. 26 This approach has been promoted
for a long time by the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity and proba-
bly it was not absolutely accidental that the Vatican's delegation on the
negotiations in Moscow was comprised mostly of the representatives of
the councilY

25. See Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, "Politics and Religion in Ukraine: The Orthodox and Greek
Catholics," The Politics of Religion in RussŸ and the New States of EurasŸ ed. Michael
Bourdeaux (Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 1995), 143-54.
26. Pravoslavnyi visnyk 4 (1990): 13-16.
27. For the composition of the Vatican's delegation to Moscow, see ibid., 13. On the Greek
Catholic reaction on the activity of the Joint Internationat Comission for Theological Dia-
logue Between the Roman Catholic and the Orthodox Church, see Rev. Peter Ga]adza,
"Good News from Balamand," Logos: A Journal ofEastern Christian Studies 34 (1993): 352-
54.
860 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE
The restoration of the Greek Catholic Church in Ukraine has
caused serious problems to Vatican relations with Moscow. There is
little doubt that the latter agreed to the legalization of the Greek
Catholics and mutual deliberations with the Vatican only under pres-
sure from civil authorities in the Gorbachev administration. Being
forced to pursue the maŸ provŸ of the governmental policy toward
the Greek Catholics, the Moscow patriarchate struck back with the ac-
cusation that the Vatican was using force and practicing proselytism in
Ukraine. The "corporate Union" of which the Ukrainian Greek Catho-
lic Church had been the main product, was viewed by the Orthodox
leaders as the major threat to Orthodoxy on the territory of the former

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USSR.
Facing the dete¡ of Orthodox-Catholic relations, some in-
fluential Catholic politicians from the Council for the Promotion of
Church Unity had accused Ukrainian Catholics of causing problems in
the Catholic-Orthodox dialogue and made the whole atmosphere in the
Vatican very unfavorable for the Greek Catholics. In September 1991,
after the proclamation of Ukrainian independence, the prefect of the
Pope's Council for Church Union, Cardinal Cassidy, reportedly stated
that the emergence of an independent Ukraine would threaten the ec-
umenical dialogue. 2s The Vatican was the 103rd state to recognize the
independence of Ukraine.
The Moscow patriarchate managed to mobilize the world Orthodox
community, including Eastern patriarchs, in its action against the Vati-
can. The ordination of the Roman Catholic bishops for the bishoprics
in Russia brought the ecumenical dialogue between Moscow and the
Vatican to the brink of collapse. The Moscow pat¡ claims as
Orthodox believers almost all the Russian population in the former So-
viet Union and does not want any significant presence of the Catholic
Church there.
Under these circumstances, the leaders of the Greek Catholic
Church are placing their hopes more and more on the personal support
of the pope. In Ap¡ 1993, Cardinal Liubachivsky, in his statement on
the intention to build the patriarchal cathedral in Kiev, asserted: "I
remind you all that the Holy Father, John Paul II Pope of Rome, him-
self stated, in the presence of the 28 bishops of our Ukrainian Greek
Catholic Church, 'I no longer see any obstacle to the proclamation of a
Patriarchate'. ''29 The same confidence in the pope's support was ex-

28. For the Ukrainian reaction on the Cardina1's statement, see Svoboda, 5 November
1991.
29. For the Ukrainian text of the statement, see Novyi shliakh, 15 May 1993; for the Eng-
lish translation see Press Release, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in
Canada, 6 May 1993.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 861

pressed by the Vatican's emissary to the Toronto eparchy, Bishop


Michael Hrynchyshyn, who stated in an interview with the correspon-
dent of The Ukrainian Weekly: "The Pope has repeatedly come out in
our defence--many times. I'm sure he hasn't changed his mind. There
might have been some statements made, but that is certainly not what
the Holy Father thinks." According to Hrynchyshyn, the pope has
been inclined to extend the power of the Lviv metropolitan beyond the
borders of Ukraine, so that he could exercise the same power in
Ukraine and over the eparchies of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in
North and South America, Europe, and Australia. a~
The interdicasterial Commission for the Church in Eastern Eu-

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rope, created by the pope on 15 January 1993 to coordinate Catholic
activities in that part of the world, was also charged with coordination
of the activities of the Greek Catholic and Roman Catholic Churches in
Ukraine. According to the Rey. Dr. Andriy Chirovsky, director of the
Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies
at St. Paul University in Ottawa, there have been three main tenden-
cies in the Vatican policy toward the Greek Catholic Church. The first
of them is connected to the desire of certain circles in Rome to support
the Church, highly respected for its struggle for survival under the
communist regime. Two other tendencies are linked to the activity of
two groups within Vatican leadership: "ecumenists" and "centralists."
Both of the groups share a hostile attitude toward the idea of a Ukrain-
ian patriarchate. The "ecumenists" are mainly preoccupied with the di-
alogue with Moscow, and "'centralists" oppose any more toward the
decentralization of world Catholicism. Those forces, according to Rey.
Dr. Chirovsky, do not want to take into account theological and histori-
cal arguments of the proponents of a Ukrainian patriarchate that are
based on the idea of the ancient tradition of Kievan Church that has
been commonly viewed as ah intermediary between East and West. ~1
There can be little doubt that the Vatican and the proponents of the
Ukrainian patriarchate, though building their respective arguments on
the decisions of the Seconcl Vatican Ecumenical Council, see the legacy
of the council from a different perspective.

CHURCH-STATE RELATIONS

The re-emergence of the Ukrainian state has created a new envi-


ronment for the activity of the Greek Catholic Church. The main goals
of state policy toward the Greek Catholics have been made public on a
number of occasions by government officials both in Lviv and Kiev. In

30. The Ukrainian Weekly, 11 April 1993.


31. Based on the author's interview with Rev. Dr. Andrii Chirovsky of 4 June 1993.
862 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE

May 1992, in his statement to the Synod of the Ukrainian Catholic


Church, Mykola Horyn, the head of the Lviv Regional Council,
strongly supported the idea of the Greek Catholic patriarchate:
Today's synod is being held in circumstances that greatly differ from all the
situations in the long history of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. For the first
time it is being held in ah independent state. And therefore the question of a
Pat¡ and Patriarch is immensely important as a certain symbol of an in-
dependent country, and as the way to ecumenism among all Ukrainian
Ch¡ 32
Horyn's statement reflected the position of the local authorities of Ga-
licia and lay Greek Catholic intelligentsia that were extremely active in
the fight for Ukrainian independence. ~~

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Kiev's official approach to the problems of the Greek Catholic
Church was expressed for the first time in August 1992 by none other
than President Leonid Kravchuk. In his speech on the occasion of the
transfer of the remains of Patriarch Josyf Slipyj from Rome to Lviv,
President Kravchuk called for the unity of the Ukrainian people of all
Christian confessions. He did not address the issue of the pat¡
but stressed that in the independent state there should be a church
free from foreign intervention, and severely criticized attempts by for-
eign religious centers to interfere in the religious life of Ukraine. ~4
Though President Kravchuk's statement came at a time of severe
c¡ in Kiev-Moscow relations over the issue of the autocephaly of the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church, there were no signals sent out that the
general approach to the problem of church-state relations did not re-
late to the Greek Catholic Church. Later, one of the officials of the
Church even complained that such an approach could create certain
problems for the Church. 35 Partly responding to such concerns, Leonid
Kravchuk mentioned in his 1993 Easter greetings to the Christians of
Ukraine that in Ukraine there was no such thing as churches that are
"ours" or "not ours" (i.e. national or foreign) and that the government
had been treating all of the confessions equally. 36

32. Press release, St. Sophia Religious Association of Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 27
May 1992.
33. Mykola Horyn comes from a Galician family whose members were active in the dissi-
dent movement in the 1960s-1980s. His brothers Bohdan, a scholar of art and literature, and
Mykhailo, a psychologist and current head of the Ukrainian Republican party, were impris-
oned by the Soviet authorities on charges of "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda." See
their short biographies in Encyclopedia of Ukraine, ed. Volodymyr Kubijovyc (Toronto: Uni-
versity of Toronto Press, 1988), 2: 229.
34. "Vystup Prezydenta Ukrainy Leonida Kravchuka na sviatochnii akademii u pamiat Pa-
triarkha Iosypa kardynala Slipoho," Holos Ukrainy, 24 September 1992.
35. Rev. Ivan Datsko, "Suchasnyi stan Ukrainskoi Hreko-Katolytskoi Tserkvy," Ukrainska
Dun~a, 4 February 1993.
36. Ukrainske slovo, 16 April 1993.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 863

In fact there are two levels in the decision-making process toward


the problems of chureh-state re/ations in Ukraine. If the central au-
thorities, being generally supportive for the national movements within
all of the nation's churches, declare their support also to the Greek
Catholics, on the local level there is no unity in the governmental pol-
icy toward Ukrainian Catholics. Authorities in Galicia, the stronghold
of the Church, are definitely pro-Greek Catholic, when the local ad-
ministrations in central and eastern Ukraine grant their support to the
Ukrainian Orthodox Churches, either of the Kiev or Moscow
patriarchates,
Thus the negative attitude toward the Greek Catholic Church was

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demonstrated by the local authorities in Kiev. There the Church had to
give up its attempts to obtain from the state one of the church buŸ
ings in the central part of the city and announced its plans to build the
cathedral on its own. The lack of understanding between the city au-
thorities and the Church caused two Western ambassadors to Ukraine
in 1992wthe USA's Roman Popacliuk and Canada's Charge de affairs
Nestor Gayovsky, both Ukrainian Catholicswto participate in the Sun-
day services of the local Greek Catholic community in the front of the
closed church. 3~
Despite every effort of Church leaders and activists to influence the
central authorities in Kiev to come out in defense of the Greek Catho-
lic Church in its conflict with the Vatican and to support the idea of the
Greek Catholic patriarchate, President Kravchuk never intervened with
the Vatican in this matter. In fact, the Greek Catholic Church was left
on its own in its struggle with the Vatican. The state never gave the
same degree of support to the patriarchate that it did to the cause of
Orthodox autocephaly when President Kravchuk wrote in the support
of the autocephaly of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to the patriarchs
of Moscow and Constantinople. 3s
The main goals of government policy toward the Greek Catholic
Church and Ukrainian-Vatican relations were formulated by President
Leonid Kuchma during bis meeting with the papal nuncio, Archbishop
Antonio Franco, in early January 1995. Kuchma reportedly to|d the
nuncio: 'r would like help from the Vatican in integrating into Eu-
rope . , . [and] we're interested in help from the Vatican to integrate

37. MyroslavIvan kardynal Liubachivsky,"Za suttiu--vselenska, za formoiu--natsŸ


alna," Kultura i zhyttia, 15 August 1992; MyroslavLevytskyi,"Svitlo i tini mizhkonfesiinoho
spivisnuvannia,"Nashe slovo, 18 April 1993.
38. On the government policy toward Orthodoxchurch in Ukraine, see Bohdan R. Boci-
urkiw, "Politics and Religion in Ukraine: The Orthodox and the Greek Catholics," in The
Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia, ed. Michael Bourdeaux
(Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 1995), 143-54.
864 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE

churches in Ukraine. ''39 On 2 May 1995 Kuchma visited the pope in


the Vatican and discussed with him the prospects for the opening of a
Ukrainian embassy at the Vatican, return of former Greek Catholic
property confiscated by the state in 1939-1946, and the Vatican's sup-
port for Ukraine in its efforts to join the Council of Europe. Both sides
agreed that the pope's visit to Ukraine in the near future would harm
Orthodox-Catholic relations in the country. 4o
It appeared that the government once again left the Greek Catholic
Church to sort out its relations with the Vatican on its own, as it was
more preoccupied with securing the pope's support in the internafional
arena than with the fate of the Greek Catholic Church in central and

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eastern Ukraine. The Vatican, for its part, appeared interested only in
the issue of the return of former Greek Catholic property in Galicia.
Both Rome and Kiev demonstrated little ir any support for Lviv's
attempts to establish a patriarchate. Nevertheless, in view of the main
provisions of state religious policy, the Vatican's efforts to limit the ter-
ritory under the jufisdiction of the Lviv see may come into conflict with
the interests of the state. Certainly there are some aspects of current
Vatiean-Lviv relafions that are of special concern to independent
Ukraine. The first of them relates to the jurisdiction of the Mukachiv
bishopfic in Transearpathia and touches on the issue of the territorial
integrity of the Ukrainian state; the second to the jurisdiction of the
Przemy~l (Peremyshl) Greek Catholic eparchy in Poland, which affects
the development of Ukrainian-Polish relations.

" O u R CAPITAL CITY OF KIEV"

On 15 February 1993, shortly after the creation by the pope in Jan-


uary 1993 of the interdicasterial Commission for the Church in Eastern
Europe, Myroslav Ivan Cardinal Liubachivsky issued a statement in
which he recognized the problems that exist in the Vatican-Ukrainian
relations over the issues of territorial jurisdiction and the Church's role
in the ecumenical process. The statement on the one hand showed to
the cardinal's flock that the would-be pat¡ shared their concern
over the Vatican's Eastern policy, and on the other, sent a signal to the
Vatican that the tensions within the Church were so high that he could
not keep the situation under control. On 27 April 1993, Myroslav Ivan
Liubachivsky came forward with another statement in which he an-
nounced the plan to build a Greek Catholic cathedral in Kiev. The
move had to accelerate the process of the confirmation of the patriar-

39. See Reuter report from Kiev, 3 January 1995.


40. See "Ukrainian President received by Pope," OMRI Daily Reports, 3 May 1995, and
Reuter's report on the issue from the Vatican City, 2 May 1995.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 865

chal structures by the Vatican. The erection of the patriarchal eathedral


in Kiev should a/so justify the desire of the Church to name its pat¡
archate that of Kiev and Halych and to support the Church's claims for
the extension of its jurisdiction over the vast territories of eastern
Ukraine. In his announcement of the plans to build the cathedral in
Kiev, Myroslav Ivan Liubachivsky stated:
Bearing in mind the Patriarchal structure of the Kiev-Halych Patriarchate of
our Church and the decision of the Lviv Synod to revive the Eparchy of
Chernihiv-Vyshhorod with its seat in Kiev (the see responsible for all our parishes
in Eastern, Central and Southern Ukraine), we intend to build a Patriarchal Sobor
for the UkrainŸ Greek Catholic Church in our capital city of Kiev.
As the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, with the help of God, I

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dare to head this holy and essential Action of our people of God in the name of the
existence and development of our Church throughout the sovereign territory of
the independent Ukrainian State and the territories of settlement.~1
Greek Catholics never managed to obtain the church building in the
central regions of Kiev to serve as its cathedral; the decision to build
the church, however, provided a solution to the problem. In the
broader context, the issue of the Kievan cathedral helps us understand
the way in which the Church has been trying to respond to the major
challenge of its twentieth-century history--the challenge of the na-
tional idea.
The idea of Ukrainioal nationalism that occupied the minds of the
Galician intelligentsia at the turn of the century eventually made the
Church serve as one of the major vehicles of the Ukrainian idea. Gali-
cian nationalists, who accepted the idea of ah independent Ukraine
from the Carpathian mountains in the west to the Don River in the
east, wanted their Church to respond to this program and to overcome
its regional, strictly Galician character. The strong desire to maintain
the dialogue with an independent Autocephalous Orthodox Church in
eastern Ukraine was one of the main characteristics of Metropolitan
Andrei Sheptytsky's activity, which was developed further by his suc-
cessor, Cardinal Slipyi.
The conflict between the local (regional) character of the Church
and the all-Ukrainian aspirations of its adherents has reflected also in
the official approach of the Church to the ecumenical problems. The
goal of the Church in this area has been viewed as a return to the times
of St. Volodymyr, the prince who baptized Kievan Rus' in 988. At that
time, itis claimed, the Kievan (Ukrainian) Church comprised part of
the Universal Church, not yet divided between East and West. Thus
the unified Ukrainian Church, which should be comprised from

41. Pressrelease, St. SophŸReligious Associationof Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, 6


May 1993.
866 JOURNAL OF CHURCH AND STATE

Ukrainian Catholics and Ukrainian Orthodox and should be in commu-


nion with both East and West, has been presented as the main goal of
the Greek Catholic Church to be achieved in the future. As it was
stated by the chancellor of the Lviv metropolitanate Rev. Ivan Datsko,
the process of the unification of Orthodox and Greek Catholic
Churches in Ukraine depends on the position of the "Three Romes'"
the Vatican, Constantinople, and Moscow. According to Datsko, if
those religious centers pursued the goal of Christian unity, the pros-
pects for Church unity in Ukraine would improve considerably. 42
Though the very idea of the unified Ukrainian Church does not
contradict the Vatican's views on the provisions of future Church unity,

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a strong Ukrainian Church uniting Orthodox and Greek Catholics
would be inconvenient for those Vatican ecumenists who have placed
all their hopes on Moscow as well as for those Vatican centralists who
do not want to see strong autonomous local churches.

CONCLUSION

The restoration of Ukrainian independence after the December


1991 referendum in Ukraine created a new environment for religious
activity in the country. The most dramatic changes took place within
the Ukrainian Orthodox Church that eventually split into three Ortho-
dox Churches, two of them with autocephalous status and one in the
juriscliction of the Moscow patriarchate. In the Ukrainian Greek Catho-
lic Church under the influence of the victo¡ national ideology, the
movement for patriarchal status for the Church has intensified.
In the twentieth century that Church has sustained two major
losses caused by the advance of Ukrainian national ideology. The first
was the mass conversion of Greek Catholics to Orthodoxy in the 1920s
in the USA and Canada; the second was the refusal of a significant part
of the once Greek Catholic parishes to convert back to Greek Catholi-
cism after the legalization of the Church in 1989. In both cases, former
Greek Catholics preferred the more nationalistic-oriented Ukrainian
Autocephalous Orthodox Church. After the proclamation of the Ortho-
dox patriarchate in Ukraine and restoration of Ukrainian indepen-
dence, the Greek Catholic authorities faced new challenges with

42. Rev. Ivan Datsko, "Spivvidnoshennia UHKTserkvy z inshymy konfesiiamy Ukrainy,"


Ukrainske slovo, 28 February 1993. Dissatisfaction of Greek Catholics in Ukraine with the
actions of the Vatican has been reflected in the results of a poll conducted in Ukraine in
1994. Of those questioned, 72.7 percent claimed to be Orthodox, 16.7 percent recognized
Cardinal Liubachivsky as their spifitual leader, and only 14.6 percent recognized the Pope,
Of Greek Catholics, 56.3 percent favored the creation of one national church in Ukraine;
see Oleksii Shuba, "Iedyna natsionalna tserkva: mit chy diisnist?" Ukrainska dumka, 12 May
1994.
BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ROME 867
respeet to Ukrainian national ideology and were foreed to go forward
with the idea of the Greek Catholie patriarehate.
The legalization of the Ukrainian Greek Catholie Chureh in the pe-
riod of Gorbaehev's "perestroika" and "glasnost" provoked a sharp anti-
Gatholie reaetion on the part of the Moseow patriarehate. The eonfliet
in Vatiean-Moseow relations that emerged af}er the eollapse of the
USSR has been extremely deep and not easy to overeome. The Joint
International Comission for Theologieal Dialogue between the Roman
Catholie Chureh and the Orthodox Chureh, whieh allowed Eastern
Catholies to partieipate in the Orthodox-Catholie dialogue, neverthe-
less eondemned the "uniatism" as an inappropriate forro of Ch¡

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unity.
After its legalization, the Greek Gatholie Chureh found itself under
eonstant attaek from the Christian East, with little support on the part
of the Christian West. There has also been little understanding of
Chureh problems on the part of the Ukrainian government, even
though the Chureh proved itself an the ardent supporter and promoter
of the idea of Ukrainian independenee. During President Kuehma's
visit to the Vatiean in May 1995, the pope agreed to tum down the
invitation extended by Chureh authorities to visit Ukraine in 1996 to
mark the 400th anniversary of the Chureh. He also assured the presi-
dent that the eelebrations in Ukraine would be held "in the spirit of
ehureh unity."
Under these eireumstmlees, it is highly unlikely that Rome will
make use of the anniversary to reeognize the Kiev and Halyeh patri-
arehate proclaimed by Joseph Slipyi. It is mueh more likely that, if the
Greek Catholie patriarehate should be reeognized by Rome in the near
future, its territory will be limited mainly to Galieia. On the eve of its
400th anniversary, after deeades of suffering under the atheistie Soviet
regime and the triumphal restoration of the late 1980s, the Ukrainian
Greek Catholie Church is struggling again, this time to prove that its
existenee is not the eonsequenee of a mistake eommitted by Rome in
the late sixteenth eentury.

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