KDA professor: Public opinion on the UOC has been deliberately inflamed

A group of Satanists near the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra. Photo: glavcom.ua

On December 10, 2024, during the European Ecumenical Consultation in Warsaw, Professor Serhiy Bortnyk from the Kyiv Theological Academy delivered a report highlighting changes in attitudes toward the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) in Ukrainian society over the past two years.

According to him, public opinion on the UOC was intentionally shaped negatively through the dissemination of a large volume of critical stuff.

“Interest in the religious topic in the media space was deliberately sustained by the stakeholders. This is evident from the large amount of negative information about the UOC and its representatives that emerged even before the law ‘On Protecting Constitutional Order in the Activities of Religious Organizations’ was passed in late August. There is no doubt in my mind that public opinion was deliberately inflamed over these two years,” Bortnyk noted.

The professor pointed to a key turning point in state religious policy: “December 1, 2022, marked the shift in state policy. On that day, Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council adopted a document titled ‘On Certain Aspects of the Activities of Religious Organizations in Ukraine.’ This led to the imposition of personal sanctions on several UOC hierarchs. Since December 2022, we have observed the instrumentalization of religion within Ukraine itself.”

He added that the team responsible for state religious policy was replaced in December 2022. Viktor Yelensky, a well-known religious scholar, assumed leadership of the State Service for Ethnopolitics and Freedom of Conscience (DESS).

“Yelensky was already known as an advocate for freedom of conscience before his appointment. However, under his leadership, the Ukrainian state effectively banned the country’s largest religious association over the past two years,” Bortnyk emphasized.

According to the professor, one of the leitmotif of the critical attitude toward the UOC within Ukraine was based on the following reasoning: “If we cannot achieve real military victories on the frontlines, they can be substituted with victories over an internal enemy – the Orthodox Church associated with the Moscow Patriarchate.”

Bortnyk believes this was important because “controlling public opinion was crucial to maintaining confidence in our strength and the belief that we are defeating the enemy – if not on the battlefield, then within the country.”

Earlier, the UOJ reported that the OCU leader accused all major religious centers in Russia of justifying the war.

Read also

Shostatsky: We have a real personnel shortage in the OCU

Metropolitan Simeon (Shostatsky) said that OCU clerics have to travel to as many as five parishes over a weekend so that believers are not left without services.

At the Zimne Monastery, an event was held in support of families of fallen soldiers

The Holy Dormition Monastery in Volhynia hosted an event to support mothers and loved ones of servicemen killed in the war.

Great schema tonsure performed in Mohyliv-Podilskyi Eparchy

The rite of tonsure into the great schema at St. Paraskeva Church in Mohyliv-Podilskyi was performed by the secretary of the Vinnytsia Eparchy.

UOC’s Myltsi monastery brethren appeal to U.S. authorities for protection

The monks of the St. Nicholas Monastery in Volhynia are asking J.D. Vance and Anna Paulina Luna to defend their rights and help prevent their possible eviction.

Teen who set fire to synagogue sentenced in Kryvyi Rih

A court sentenced a minor to two years of probation supervision after he admitted guilt and compensated for damages caused by the arson of a synagogue building.

"KyivPride" organizers announced dates for holding LGBT march in capital

Activists plan to hold mass events in June 2026.