For several weeks, the Russian government has been trying to give a religious and sacred dimension to its offensive against Ukraine.

HASstop the lord of Hell”: for several weeks, the Russian authorities have been trying to give a religious and sacred dimension to their offensive against Ukraine. But this rhetoric divides even within the Orthodox Church.


A sign of the importance for the Kremlin of the spiritual dimension it seeks to instill in its military intervention, Vladimir Putin affirmed, during his New Year’s greetings, that “moral correctness” was on Moscow’s side.

This claim illustrates the will of the authorities to iron out the doubts of part of the population thrown off balance by the entry of Russian troops into a country where the majority of believers are, as in Russia, Orthodox Christians.

As Moscow suffered several military setbacks, religious rhetoric gained increasing momentum from the fall, with senior officials and state media portraying the intervention in Ukraine as a ‘holy war’ against a West portrayed as decadent. .





Read also
Ceasefire: Putin’s cynical demand


At the beginning of November, ex-president Dmitry Medvedev, currently number two in the powerful Russian Security Council, thus affirmed that the “sacred objective” of the offensive was to “stop the lord of Hell”.

“We are fighting those who hate us, who ban our language, our values ​​and even our faith,” said Medvedev, for whom Russia’s enemies are Ukrainian “Nazis” and “dogs” of the West.

military priests

Beyond the speeches, the intertwining of the religious and the military is also manifested by the sending of dozens of priests to the front to support the soldiers.

Military priest Sviatoslav Tchourkanov explains to AFP that these missions aim to prevent soldiers from “losing their soul, even if the situation pushes them to it”.

A priest must “root in the soul of the military that prisoners should not be tortured. We must not loot, we must not harm civilians, ”he continues.

The cleric has no doubts about the merits of this assault on Ukraine, which, according to him, consists in defending the “traditional values” of which the Kremlin and the Russian Orthodox Church present themselves as the protectors.

“In Ukraine, even under wartime conditions, gay prides are organized to show adherence to Western values,” the priest exclaims, echoing the discourse of Russian power on the “decadent” West.

A sign of the importance of these clerics in the conflict, Mr. Putin awarded in November the title of “Hero of the Russian Federation”, the country’s highest distinction, to an Orthodox priest killed in the combat zone, Mikhail Vasiliev .

The powerful leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, has also expressed his support for the military offensive, saying that it is necessary to support the pro-Russian “brothers” in eastern Ukraine who have “rejected” Western values.





Read also
War in Ukraine: the Russian Christmas truce that was not one


During a sermon at the end of September, he affirmed that those killed while fulfilling their “military duty” performed a “sacrifice which washes away all sins”.

“Middle Ages”

But this involvement of the Church in the conflict and the increasingly religious rhetoric surrounding it are not unanimous in Russia.

“This rhetoric of holy war comes straight from the Middle Ages,” said Andrei Kordotchkine, a priest of the Russian Orthodox Church stationed in Madrid, in an interview with AFP. “It is exactly this term that was used by Pope Urban II when he blessed the crusade (launched in 1096), promising the crusaders that their sins would be forgiven,” he explains. “But it is impossible to go back to the past. A war, which is a form of murder, cannot have any spiritual meaning,” he adds.

If the Moscow Patriarchate shows frank support for the military intervention, it has caused a stir within the Orthodox world, with a bitter struggle between the Russian and Ukrainian Orthodox Churches.

Even within the Russian clergy, there are differences: as of March 1, a platform against “fratricidal war” was signed by 293 Orthodox religious.

“It is not only (Russian) society that is divided, but also the Church and the clergy,” said priest Andrei Kordotchkine.

Several signatories of the text have been sanctioned by the patriarchy, confides one of them, on condition of anonymity. “Some have been moved from their parishes where they had served for years and replaced by priests loyal to power,” he said, calling the Russian offensive a “catastrophe”.

California18

Welcome to California18, your number one source for Breaking News from the World. We’re dedicated to giving you the very best of News.

Leave a Reply