“Right Sector” and UOC KP “cleric” grab the temple in Gnezdychno

Fighters from the Right Sector blocked the temple.

On March 3, 2019, adherents of the “holy church of Ukraine”, with the help of fighters from the Right Sector, seized the Holy Transfiguration temple in the village of Gnezdychno, Zbarazh district of Ternopol region. Believers of the canonical Church, who entered the temple for negotiations, were beaten and driven out into the street. According to the UOC Information and Education Department, the whole process was led by the scandalous “cleric” of the UOC KP Ivan Lesik.

“Our people were simply thrown out of the church into the street,” said Protopriest Stephan Balan, the parish priest, who was hospitalized after previous clashes with the OCU supporters, commented on the situation.

He explained that the OCU community had once again violated the agreement and provoked a conflict in the village, having performed a divine service in the temple premises.

“A month ago, when the OCU representatives ”failed to take possession of the temple, they demanded that, in order to preserve peace in the village, the services would be held alternately on the street, while the temple would be sealed, but they had the keys to the temple, the cleric said. “Today, their community, headed by pseudo-father Ivan Lesik, for the third time violated its own conditions, opened a sealed church, and began to perform “worship”. When, upon completion of the service, our believers came to the temple and asked to give an opportunity for the UOC community to hold a service in the temple, they were flatly denied.”

According to the testimony of Father Stefan, this time supporters of the new Ukrainian Church used physical force toward the UOC believers. They were helped by 15-20 fighters from the “Right Sector” who blocked the temple while negotiations were taking place in it.

“There was such a situation that there were about 30 members of the UOC religious community, the entire OCU community, part of the Right Sector and the police in the temple. After the shouting and turmoil, supporters of the OCU, led by the pseudo-priest Lesik, began to beat and throw out the UOC believers to the cries “Muscovites are not to be here”, the senior priest of the Holy Transfiguration temple said.

The press service of the UOC stressed that the incident with the beating of innocent people shows how insecure the UOC believers are in the situation of the gravest violation of their rights and freedoms.

As the UOJ reported, on February 3, 2019, activists staged a provocation and thwarted the Divine Liturgy in the Holy Transfiguration temple in the village of Gnezdychno, Zbarazh district of Ternopol region. The police sided with the radicals.

Read also

Shevchuk tells Budanov of UGCC’s “state-building role”

The head of the Uniates told the head of the Presidential Office that his Church was ready to partner with the state and presented him with a book on the work of special services in the Church.

Authorities decline to disclose Ukraine’s population size

The State Statistics Service acknowledged that it has up-to-date population estimates for the country, but has decided not to make them public.

Lithuanian govt vows to protect Orthodox Church from Russian intelligence

Lithuania’s Foreign Ministry has called for curbing the influence of Russian intelligence services on the Church, while an adviser to President Nausėda warned against labeling the entire structure a security threat.

During Ramadan, Patriarch Theodoros hosts Islamic iftar at his residence

Patriarch Theodoros of Alexandria hosted a meal for Muslim workers breaking their fast in the courtyard of the Patriarchate and thanked a sheikh for his “brotherhood.”

Lawsuit filed against Patriarch of Constantinople

A Turkish official has accused Patriarch Bartholomew and dozens of clergy of “illegal activity” and violating the Treaty of Lausanne.

OCU cleric buried with Church Slavonic funeral shroud

In the Ternopil Eparchy of the OCU, a cleric was buried under a funeral shroud bearing inscriptions in Church Slavonic.