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Russian Orthodox reunification: more fodder for West Bank conflict?
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Mon, 05/21/2007 - 01:28.
Patriarch Alexy II, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, gave Russian President Vladimir Putin an icon May 17, as a token of appreciation for his contribution to the unification of the Moscow-based Church and the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR). The agreement signed earlier in the day reunited the two branches of the Russian Orthodox Church, ending the generations-long breach that followed the Bolshevik revolution of 1917. Putin, who attended the signing ceremony, received from Alexy a casket with a folding icon of the Live-Giving Trinity. "Let it be a reminder of today, a day that has unified us all," the patriarch said. Alexy and ROCOR Metropolitan Laurus signed the agreement at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow. (Interfax, May 17) The reunification has strong reverberations for resurgent Russian nationalism—and may have been closely monitored by the US intelligence services. Last November, as unification talks were underway in San Francisco, a British ROCOR priest named Andrew Phillips claimed that the CIA had bugged the discussions—although his only evidence was a "mysterious black SUV" parked nearby. (Interfax, Nov. 7) Time magazine's coverage of the reunification noted:
The unification deal could have repercussions in East Jerusalem and the West Bank:
As the New York Times noted at the time (July 11, 1997):
According to a May 17 report on Asia News, the reunification does not mean the end of ROCOR:
The Time report says that ROCOR properties in the Holy Land should not change administration—while adding that "some observers remain skeptical." But as the blog Bartholomew's Notes on Religion finds, the Palestinian Authority is not the only body known to have interfered with Orthodox Christian affairs in the Holy Land. They note a murky land deal by which Israeli settlers gained a lease to Greek Orthodox property in East Jerusalem, leading to a major scandal and the deposition of the Greek patriarch Irenios. Irenios blamed his treasurer, Nicholas Papadimas, who (apparently) remains missing after two years... (Bartholomew's Notes on Religion, May 18) Perhaps an opportunity for more monastic slugfests? See our last posts on Russia and Israel/Palestine. |
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