Ukrainian patriarch in Washington: Putin wants to ‘erase’ Ukraine
Washington D.C., Feb 22, 2025 / 07:00 am
The head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church during a visit to Washington, D.C., this week advocated for a lasting peace in Ukraine “that does not appease dictators” as the U.S. begins negotiations with Russia.
“Putin’s objectives are clear: He wants to erase Ukraine, its people, and its church,” Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk stated during a panel discussion at the Hudson Institute on Thursday.
“If Russia succeeds in occupying Ukraine, our church will not survive. For us, it’s a matter of life and death,” Shevchuk said.
He continued: “History teaches us that whenever Russia takes control of territories with Eastern Catholics, it enforces them into the Russian Orthodox Church, drives them into exile, or sends them to perish in prison camps.”
Shevchuk’s visit comes as the Trump administration begins to open diplomatic channels to Russia in an attempt to end the Ukraine war. Top U.S. and Russian diplomats met in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, marking the first major communication between Washington and Moscow since the start of the war three years ago. Ukrainian diplomats were notably excluded from the meeting.
During the discussion, which also included the metropolitan archbishop of Philadelphia, Borys Gudziak, and Archpriest Marc Morozovich, Shevchuk warned of the danger to Ukraine and to other nations if Ukraine is occupied by Russia.
“We seek a just peace, not a temporary ceasefire that lets the aggressor return stronger,” Shevchuk said during the discussion.
He further asserted that the Baltic countries, Poland, Georgia, Armenia, and other central Asian countries would also soon be in danger of occupation should Russia prevail over Ukraine. “Putin wants to rebuild the Russian Empire — if Ukraine falls, others will be next,” Shevchuk said.
“We cannot afford to be naive,” he continued. “As the Apostle Paul warns, ‘While people are saying peace and security, then sudden disaster comes upon them.’”
President Donald Trump recently signaled his administration’s intention to definitively pull back U.S. support for Ukraine. In a social media post on Wednesday, he said that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whom he described as a “modestly successful comedian” had manipulated the U.S. into spending $350 billion “to go into a war that couldn’t be won.”
Trump further shifted blame for the conflict’s duration and its death toll on Zelenskyy, asserting that the Ukrainian president “has done a terrible job,” leaving his country “shattered.”
Shevchuk expressed that he believed Trump’s statements mirrored “Russian propaganda talking points” and that Ukraine’s future, and that of the church, depends on a lasting peace.
He cited the example of how in December 2022, Russian authorities declared the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church illegal, outlawing Caritas Ukraine and the Knights of Columbus. He also spoke of two Ukrainian priests who suffered “brutal torture” over the course of 18 months of Russian captivity. Their release, he said, was “thanks to the special effort and mediation of the Holy See.”
“But at least 10 others, Protestants, pastors, are in the same condition and they are tortured right now, at this moment. We have to remember them and speak up on behalf of their release,” he noted.
“Despite Russian propaganda that falsely claims Ukraine suppresses religious freedom, the truth is quite the opposite,” Shevchuk continued. “Ukraine guarantees religious liberty, allowing all faiths to practice freely. Meanwhile, in Russian-occupied territories, religious groups not aligned with the Russian Orthodox Church are persecuted.”
Shevchuk described the forced deportation of Ukrainian children as “one of the most horrifying crimes of this war.”
“Thousands have been taken from occupied territories and placed in Russian families, orphanages, or so-called reeducation camps,” he said. “These children are forced to forget their Ukrainian identity; many aren’t even back from Russia. Many are even given new names.”
“Each deported child represents another family torn apart by war,” Shevchuk reflected.
To end the war in Ukraine, he said, Ukraine “must have a clear strategy for peace, one that does not appease dictators.”
The Ukrainian patriarch likened the Russian political concept “Ruskiy Mir,” or “Russian World,” to that of radical Islamism. “The ideology of the ‘Russian world’ is Russian jihadism,” he said. “The whole ideology of the war is to come back to the times of the Soviet Union.”
For this to occur, Shevchuk said, would be for Ukrainians to return “back to the catacombs.”