Ukrainian Catholics mark ‘renewed independence’ of Ukraine amid war

3 mins read
PHILADELPHIA UKRAINE INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATION
Basilian Sisters Monica Lesnick, left, and Ann Laszok, joined Father Roman Pitula, rector of the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Philadelphia, attend Ukraine's Independence Day ceremony at Philadelphia's City Hall Aug. 24, 2022. (CNS photo/Gina Christian, CatholicPhilly.com)

PHILADELPHIA (CNS) — Ukrainian Catholics in the Philadelphia area marked Ukraine’s Independence Day with a mixture of pride, gratitude and grief — along with intense determination to preserve that nation’s freedom amid a brutal Russian invasion, now in its sixth month.

Some 300 gathered at Philadelphia’s City Hall Aug. 24 for a midday ceremonial raising of Ukraine’s flag attended by Ukraine’s Ambassador to the U.S. Oksana Markarova, Honorary Consul of Ukraine Iryna Mazur, Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney and other elected officials.

A second flag was unfurled by children, with attendees writing personalized messages of support for Ukraine, while Mazur announced that Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has just been awarded the 2022 Liberty Medal by the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.

A portrait of Zelenskyy by Native American artist Jeremy Salazar, commissioned by the Spirit of Liberty Foundation, also was unveiled at the event, with plans in the works to present it directly to Zelenskyy in the coming months.

Many in the crowd recalled their own memories of that day in 1991 when Ukraine declared its independence from the former Soviet Union.

“I was 10 years old,” said Mariana Karapinka, chief communications officer for the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia. “I came into the kitchen in the morning, and my mom said, ‘Now we are free.'”

Though only 17 at the time, Father Roman Pitula, rector of the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Philadelphia, said he felt great “excitement” and “a feeling of satisfaction that … Ukraine had regained its independence as a sovereign country in Europe.”

That liberation also saw the reemergence of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, persecuted over the centuries and driven underground by the Soviet regime, he told CatholicPhilly.com, the online news outlet of the Philadelphia Archdiocese.

Father Pitula stressed that Ukraine’s was a “renewed independence,” one with centuries-old roots.

“We’re not 31 years old, or 100 years old as Putin says when he claims Lenin established Ukraine,” said Father Pitula. “Our history goes back over 1,500 years. Kyiv was founded in 482, while Moscow wasn’t built until 1147. So do the math.”

Basilian Sister Ann Laszok agreed, saying Russian President Vladimir Putin is “rewriting history” to obscure Ukraine’s true legacy.

That heritage has been instilled not only in resident Ukrainians, but in the global Ukrainian community, said Nicholas Rudnytzky, professor of history and dean of academic services at Manor College in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania, a Catholic institution with deep roots in the Ukrainian American community.

Speaking by telephone with CatholicPhilly.com Aug. 23, Rudnytzky — whose father, Leo, is a renowned Ukrainian literary scholar — said he and other “children of the diaspora had to know (their) history,” which was often learned both in the home and in classes hosted at parishes and centers of education, such as Manor.

Before and throughout the current invasion — which continues attacks launched by Russia in 2014 — Manor College has been a locus of multifaceted support for Ukraine, with its president, Jonathan Peri, calling for “prayer and humanitarian action” as the nation commemorated its sovereignty.

As Russia continues to press its offensive in eastern Ukraine — and with its invasion already declared a genocide by several investigators — both spiritual and material assistance are more crucial than ever, said the faithful.

Father Volodymyr Radko of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia, ordained in Ukraine just 12 days before the current invasion, said although he was “grateful to God Ukraine is still standing,” his heart is “broken because there is still war.”

Hours before the City Hall ceremony, a Russian missile attack on a train station in the eastern town of Chaplyne killed 22, including an 11-year-old boy, and wounded about 50.

Father Radko said he found himself reliving “the emotions of being in Lviv on the morning of Feb. 24,” and the successive weeks he spent ministering to aid workers and sheltering during air raid sirens.

Basilian Sister Monica Lesnick, whose grandparents and parents were from Ukraine, fought back tears at the gathering.

“I want to celebrate, but I can’t even speak; I cry right away,” she said. “I’m worrying about the people there. I don’t even want to hear the news tonight because I’m afraid.”

She and Sister Ann noted several of their fellow sisters have chosen to remain in active conflict areas in Ukraine — including Zaporizhzhia, where Europe’s largest nuclear power plant is now occupied by Russian troops, with Ukrainian employees operating it at gunpoint and the plant sustaining shelling.

An inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency, though planned, has yet to take place. Energoatom, the plant’s operator, said on its website the potential threat from the site “could be 10 times greater than the scale of the Fukushima and Chernobyl disasters.”

The Fukushima, Japan, nuclear disaster took place in 2011; the Chernobyl disaster happened in 1986 near the city of Pripyat in the north of Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union.

Markarova said Ukraine’s independence “is a key to security and prosperity in Europe … and in the world.”

Faithful on hand agreed, adding that Ukraine’s struggles show “how fragile independence is,” said Karapinka. “Nations who have been independent for many centuries do not understand it as we do.”

Freedom itself “is a great gift of God,” said Father Ruslan Borovyi, pastor of St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Church in Philadelphia. “At the same time, it is a responsibility, and that’s why we fight for our independence.”

Prayer is essential to that battle, said faithful.

Sister Ann recalled the late Cardinal Lubomyr Husar, major archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church from 2005 to 2011, who said that “if it wasn’t for monasticism and prayer, Ukraine wouldn’t have been free.”

“I think the prayer of all the people … will be victorious for Ukraine,” she added.

Christian is a senior content producer for CatholicPhilly.com, the news website of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

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