Posted on 02/24/2014 1:45:33 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
TORONTO - As Torontos Ukrainians woke up to news that former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was on the run in eastern Ukraine after parliament had voted him out of office and that national elections are scheduled for May 25, they gathered to pray. At Dormition of the Mother of God Ukrainian Catholic Church all three Divine Liturgies on Feb. 23 included special, added prayers for the future of Ukraine.
It caps more than a month of prayers for their homeland at the giant Mississauga parish.
Were all Ukrainians. We do want to show our respect and solidarity with our brothers and sisters, said Vlodko, a cantor at the church who declined to give his last name. And in prayer, thats the best solidarity we can show.
The parish prayed for the spiritual unity of the nation a concept Ukrainians call yenest.
First comes the spiritual then comes the political, said 17-year-old Bohdan, who also declined to give his last name. If everybody is together spiritually, then it will come politically.
Bohdan and his mother Maria both said they would like to be in Kiev, on the Maidan with the protesters.
Mama will go too to support them, to be with them, said Maria.
Ukrainians hope they are witnessing the refounding of their nation, which was founded spiritually and politically with the Christianization of Kievan Rus by King Vladimir the Great in 987, said Bohdan.
While Canadian Ukrainians are hopeful, its hard not to be nervous as well, said computer engineer Ihor Panczenko as he exited the church. Even after the political is taken care of there still we be concern about the countrys financial position, Panczenko said. They still have financial obligations.
Without Yanukovych it seems unlikely Russia will come through with $15 billion in promised aid, he said.
There is a pivotal role for the Church in Ukraine, said Panczenko.
Im hoping they provide a moral compass to guide the people, and not let emotions run wild, he said. Even for people here, were constantly having prayers and vigils for people who have lost their lives. I guess it helps people focus on what is important.
Among the heavenly 100 Ukrainians killed on Kievs Maidan while protesting against the Yanukovych government, Ukrainian Catholic University history lecturer Bohdan Solchanyk is being mourned in Canada and Ukraine. A 29-year-old veteran of the 2004 Orange Revolution, Solchanyk was an expert in Ukrainian electoral processes.
Its just not fair, said St. Sofia Ukrainian Catholic School student Lukas Riectshin of the sacrifices made on the Maidan. We just hope for a better future.
In Toronto, prayers for Ukraine included prayers for the government and army. The Church has been very careful about any hint of setting Ukrainians against each other, said Vlodko.
The only role the Church can take is whats written in the Gospels, taking that route, he said. By taking that route you hope to eventually change how people think.
A communist-era mindset of power-seeking, prone to corruption, has contaminated the political culture of the nation. While the Church does not want to be involved politically, it couldnt turn its back on what was happening, Vlodko said.
Finally, it came to the point where we said, Weve got to pray for these people. These are our people out there, he said.
In Ukraine a move by the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kievan Patriarchate to drop prayers for the government and army after authorities tried to clear the square is seen as one of the keys to the fall of the government.
Ukrainian Catholic priests who were told in January they needed permission to pray and hold services on the Maidan and then threatened with new legislation to control Church activity continued to pray with and for the demonstrators. Ukrainian Catholic clergy also looked for opportunities to pray with the police, but were not given the chance, Canadian Jesuit Father David Nazar told The Catholic Register by e-mail from Ukraine.
Before Yanukovych was ejected from office and while protests still raged, Nazar called the confrontation a struggle for the soul of the nation.
I have never been in a country where there is such a devotion to the soul of the nation, Nazar wrote. Perhaps because so much suffering has taken place here so much blood spilled, so much repression one persons suffering becomes everyones.
In Toronto, Ukrainians gathered nightly in front of the Ukrainian consulate to protest and be in solidarity with protesters in the Ukrainian capital.
They say 26 dead. We dont believe that number, said Ukrainian Canadian Congress Toronto vice president Peter Schturyn as about 500 gathered in front of the consulate in the citys west end Feb. 19. Its probably going to be in the hundreds as theyre counting bodies. Theyve already found one in the river.
The Toronto protests began with the Ukrainian sung prayer for the dead, the Panachida. Led by Dormition of the Mother of God pastor Archpriest Roman Pankiw and Deacon Serhij Kasyanchuk of St. Demetrius parish, the prayer was sung slowly and with conviction.
This is a shock for everybody, that the government has taken arms against its own people, said Mary Dubyk.
Dubyk was out in front of the Toronto consulate nightly before the Yanukovych government fell. For her, the most important part of each evening was singing the Panachida, before any speeches or political chants.
Thats part of our culture. We remember those who have died, Dubyk said.
Schturyn was confident both the Church and Ukrainians in Canada will have a role in shaping the countrys future. For Ukrainians theres nothing strange about starting a protest with prayers or having priests, deacons and nuns present to pray with protesters, he said. In Canada, Ukrainians simply wouldnt be who they are without their Church.
Before we had anything else, we built churches, Schturyn said. Our priests have often been community leaders. It works hand in hand.
Within Ukraine, peoples expectations of the Church are great, said Nazar.
The Church offers a voice of balance and restraint, a voice against evil and a voice for peaceful resolution through dialogue, Nazar said.
The people should demand an amendment guaranteeing the right to keep and bear arms in their new constitution.
anyone want to bet the new Ukraine will protect the rights of sodomites?
Make no mistake, the protestors wanting “closer ties to the west” was code speak for we don’t want anything to do with the anti-sodomite attitudes of Russia.
Wrong. They don’t want to be ruled by stupid thug KGB Putin, the mass-murderer of innocent Christian women and children.
I hope they have a new beginning as well. Unfortunately I don’t think they’ll find it within the EU.
I doubt that featured much in the minds of the protestors. It’s likely to be your obsession, not theirs’.
2nd reply as in ammendment !!!
Ukraine should know by now that it isnt going to be that easy to get rid of this problem.
um.. I must have missed when Putin mass murdered innocent Christian women and children... can you please link me to an article about that.
LOL if you say so.
There are no coincidences.
KGB Putin dropped cluster bombs on the heads of innocent Christian civilians and he ethnically cleansed thousands when he invaded Georgia in 2008. Putin is a mass-murderer with the blood of innocents on his hands. If you “missed” that it’s probably because you looked the other way so you wouldn’t see.
They can own guns. Their gun laws are very similar to ours.
The Ukraine is not very religious anymore. Russia is much more religious.
No quick offer of EU entry to Ukraine despite regime change - February 24, 2014 - While saying it "hears" Ukraine's dream of joining the EU, the Western bloc failed Monday to hold out the prospect of entry in spite of regime change that began with pro-EU protests. As the bloc's foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton flew into Kiev after a weekend that saw the capital fall to protesters and the regime flee into hiding, the European Union sung a note of caution, with diplomats warning of the threat of partition and of Russian ire. "We hear Ukraine's European aspiration, we see it and are ready to support it," said a spokesman for the bloc's executive arm, the European Commission. But asked whether Brussels was ready to sign the ground-breaking political and trade pact years in the making that was at the root of Ukraine's three-month turmoil, spokesman Olivier Bailly said: "No. I think our idea is that we must let a transition process go to its final point" of elections set for May 25 "and once we have a government we will be ready to discuss again."
This has been about Russia vs the EU for years and it has nothing to do with an invitation.
The leader of the Ukrainian opposition Arseny Yatsenyuk is a Christian and he is against gay marriage.
Putin’s Russia invaded Georgia and exterminated and ethnically cleansed thousands of innocent people. The EU has never invaded any other country.
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