Verkhovna Rada committee approves Thanksgiving celebration

The VR Committee on Humanitarian and Information Policy. Photo: Raskolam.net

The Committee on Humanitarian and Information Policy of the Verkhovna Rada has approved the initiative to celebrate Thanksgiving Day in Ukraine on the last Sunday of September, reports "Detector Media". This day will not be designated as a holiday, which means that it will not require an additional budget allocation for the holiday.

According to the initiative, the government will develop a comprehensive plan of events to celebrate Thanksgiving Day at the state level with the involvement of representatives of the All-Ukrainian Council of Churches and religious organisations and approve it within three months.

According to the chairman of the committee, Nikita Poturaev, this project "has a unifying goal concerning all believers, regardless of religious denominations" and also shows that "freedom of conscience is one of the cornerstones of Ukrainian statehood".

Ukrainian MP Volodymyr Viatrovych from Eurosolidarity, who abstained from voting, said that those religious holidays that are part of the Ukrainian tradition and "deeply rooted" in the culture of the Ukrainian people should be celebrated in Ukraine at the state level.

As reported, two bills on the establishment of Thanksgiving Day in Ukraine have already been submitted to the Rada. On 7 August 2023, the Verkhovna Rada registered bill 9574, authored by Georgiy Mazurashu, on the introduction of a new holiday "Thanksgiving Day", which proposes to make 22 October a day off. In October, bill 10152, authored by Viktor Mialyk, was introduced, where Thanksgiving Day was proposed to be set for the last Sunday of September.

Read also

Sand for construction of Yermak’s residence brought from cemetery, MP says

MP Yaroslav Zhelezniak said that sand illegally removed from a cemetery in Ukrainka was used in the construction of the elite Dynasty cooperative in Kozyn.

Italian court recognizes family with three parents as legal

In Bari, the appellate court ordered authorities to register an adoption according to which a child is listed as having two "fathers" and one mother.

Archaeologists discover biblical Bethsaida on shore of Sea of Galilee

Researchers have discovered a first-century residential house beneath the apse of a Byzantine church and a mosaic inscription mentioning the Apostle Peter.

Israeli soldiers receive jail terms for mocking statue of the Virgin Mary

Those involved in the act of sacrilege in the village of Debel will spend several weeks behind bars for desecrating a statue of the Mother of God.

Serbian Church officially receives back land of 15th-century monastery

An agreement was signed in Belgrade transferring the territory of the ancient Vojlovica Monastery to the Banat Eparchy.

Pat Daniel comments on conflict between Phanar bishop and community in Turkey

The Bulgarian Primate believes that the hierarch of the Constantinople Patriarchate should not have forced the Bulgarian community in Edirne to serve in Greek.