Between 1937 and 1938, more than 150 Ukrainian Orthodox Churches were destroyed under the auspices of the Second Polish Republic in the two regions of Kholm and Pidliashia that now respectively comprise the Lublin and Podlaskie Voivodeships.[1][2][3]
Background
editAt the start of the year 1918, there were 370 Ukrainian Orthodox Churches, in the Kholm and Pidliashia regions, upon the declaration of Polish independence in 1918, around 320 of them were immediately converted to Roman Catholic Churches and the remainder were closed or destroyed. Only 50 Orthodox Churches remained for practice by an Orthodox population of an estimated 230,000.[1][2][4]
In response to the remaining Orthodox faithful whose refusal to convert was perceived as obstinate, the Polish authorities launched a campaign to convert "the Ukrainian Orthodox faithful to Roman Catholicism."[1]
The resistance of the local population against efforts to convert led to the introduction of a policy of "revinidication". In 1938 a coordinating committee was formed and headed by General J. Morawinski who was delegated the role of implementing the plans, bolstered by the help of military garrisons.[1]
Acting in conjunction with the Coordinating Committee, the Polish press echoed calls demanding that Ukrainian Orthodox Churches start using Polish during liturgies and catechism classes, and introduced a new calendar for celebrating "Ukrainian religious feasts". Calls were also issued for Orthodox children to attend Mass in Roman Catholic churches and public assemblies were convened during which "resolutions were passed to destroy Ukrainian orthodox churches".[1]
In 1938 the Polish government issued an order instituting the use of Polish during sermons, in protest Ukrainian priests stopped giving sermons altogether. In July 1938, The Polish Parliament (Sejm) was the scene of protest, when Ukrainian members of parliament including the Orthodox Priest Reverend Martyn Volkov (Sarny), Stepan Skrypnyk and the Ukrainian Catholic Stepan Baran lodged a number of complaints "against the convention between Poland and the Vatican". Similarly, protests were also lodged by Ukrainian delegates Ostap Lutsky and deputy senator Mykola Maslov on 14 July 1938.[1]
During the session of Parliament, Sejm Deputy S Baran declared "As a Ukrainian and a Greek Catholic who is subject to the Apostolic capital and the pope, I declare that the question of the defence of the Orthodox Church is a national issue for the entire Ukrainian nation, and therefore we, Ukrainian Greek Catholic Galician deputies will be voting against [the signing of an agreement between Poland and the Vatican] in defence of the Orthodox Church which is dear to us, and in the interest of the Ukrainian nation, in the name of its historical and technical rights".[1]
As punishment for his stand, Rev. Volkov was stripped of his parish in Sarny and forced into hiding in the residence of Metropolitan Dionisii.[1]
In response to the recent actions in the Polish Parliament, the Lviv-based newspaper Dilo wrote on 9 July 1938 "Today in the Polish Sejm the representatives of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic and Orthodox population of Galicia, Volyn, and Pidliashia demonstrated their Ukrainian national unity and community in defence of national-religious positions."[1]
The Polish parliament and Senate ignored the Ukrainians protests, and the convention was enacted on 20 June 1938 in the Second Polish Republic. According to the provisions of the convention "property that had belonged to parishes of the Orthodox Church and had temporarily belonged to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church was to be transferred to the Polish state".[1]
After ostensibly attaining the "legal right" to the Orthodox Church, the government of the Second Polish Republic launched the destruction of Ukrainian Orthodox Churches in the Kholm and Pidliashia regions in late June 1938. The auxiliary forces mobilized to assist with the operation included Polish state policemen, and Polish workers.[1]
Result
editThe oldest church located in the Kholm Region was built in the village of Rozotka, immediately upon declaring independence the Polish government had closed the 16th century church and Ukrainian parishioners were permitted to attend Mass there only three times a year. On 8 July 1938 the church was destroyed.
During the months of June and July 1938, a total of 112 church were destroyed in the Kholm and Pidliashia regions of the Second Public Republic. 98 of them had been constructed before the Union of Brest (1596) and included: the Church in Zamostia (1589), the Cathedral in Bila Pidliaska (1582), the Church in Kornystia (1578) and finally the Church in Shchebreshyn (1184). In his interpellation to then Polish Prime Minister Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski, parliamentarian Stepan Baran noted that "all of these gems of ancient Ukrainian architecture were utterly destroyed and irredeemably lost to civilization" [1]
Reactions
editOn 16 July 1938 Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytsky, the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, issue his archpastoral letter condemning "the acts of vandalism committed by the Poles, who had shown themselves to be the enemies of the Christian faith". In the letter Metropolitan Andrei deeply sympathised with his Orthodox brethren. The contents of the letter was not widely known, due to the fact it was seized by the Polish authorities.[1]
Ukrainian hierarchies abroad also reacted with indignation to the action of the Polish government, Archbishop Ioann Teodorovych, the metropolitan of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA, "condemned the destruction of churches, the forcible conversion of Orthodox parishioners to Roman Catholicism, and the Vatican's illegal sale to Poland of Orthodox Church property, which it had never owned in the first place".[1]
Polish Support and Rapport with Orthodox Ukrainians.
editThe Council of Bishops of the Orthodox Autocephalous Church in Poland vigorously protested against the destruction of the churches and on 16 July 1938 issued a letter of indignation, that also reached only a portion of the population due to censorship.[1]
Several Polish lawyers and journalists decried the persecution of Orthodox Ukrainians and the destruction of local churches.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Kardash, Peter. Genocide in Ukraine. ISBN 0-9581038-3-6. OCLC 162556804.
- ^ a b Petrenko, Halyna (1987). Ukraine, a Concise Encyclopedia. the University of Michigan.
- ^ "Kholm region". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
- ^ Love Olia Ferbey Prokopiw ·, Orysia (1967). The Ukrainians An Outline History. the University of California.