The leader of the Ukrainian Catholic Church has vowed that his clergy
will not be deterred by the government’s threat to revoke the
registration of the Byzantine-rite body.
The Ukrainian Catholic Church (UGCC) has released the full text of a
statement by Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, responding to a
government complaint that the UGCC clergy had engaged in “systematic
disregard for the law” by participating in demonstrations in Kiev’s
Independence Square.
Major-Archbishop Shevchuk observed that the government was threatening
the activity of the UGCC for “the first time Ukraine’s independence.” He
also pointed out that Ukraine is now celebrating the “25th anniversary
of the legalization of the UGCC in the former Soviet Union.”
“I hope that the state authorities, especially those entrusted with the
task of serving people in guaranteeing their right for religious freedom
in Ukraine, will be wise enough not to commence a persecution of the
Church,” the Ukrainian prelate said.
Many of the faithful had joined in the peaceful demonstrations in
Independence Square, expressing their concern about the government’s
decision to distance Ukraine from the European Union, the UGCC leader
said.
“The presence of the priest there, where his faithful are, is a
fundamental part of his pastoral ministry,” he insisted. Priests have
the right to pray with their people, he said. “The realization of such a
right does not require the special permission of the state.”