Chernihiv City Council names street after first UOC-KP "patriarch"

Mstyslav Skrypnyk. Photo: raskolam.net

On February 8, 2024, the Chernihiv City Council renamed Stratylat Street (Michael Stratylat, organizer of the partisan movement in the Chernihiv region during World War II), giving it the name of the first "patriarch" of the UOC-KP Mstyslav Skrypnyk. This was reported by the press service of the city council.

According to the authors of the message, the decision was dictated by the "need to protect the interests of the country."

In the explanatory note to the draft decision on changing the names of this and 20 other streets and three alleys in Chernihiv, it is said that thanks to these renamings, "streets and other objects become 'incorporeal monuments' to those persons and events that are defined as outstanding in the current symbolic context."

Mstyslav (Stepan Ivanovych) Skrypnyk was born in 1898 in Poltava, studied at the Orenburg Officer School, and served in the Russian Imperial Army. In 1917, he joined the army of the Ukrainian People's Republic (UNR), and then became an aide-de-camp to his uncle, Simon Petliura.

From 1941 to 1944, Stepan Skrypnyk was a representative of the German Reich Ministry for the Eastern Territories with the Army Group South and a trusted person of the occupational government for civil administration. In the occupied Rovno, he published the newspaper "Volyn", which glorified Hitler and his army.

In 1942, Skrypnyk became a "monk" with the name Mstyslav, a "deacon", a "priest", and soon after, a "bishop" of the UAOC. According to contemporaries, he was involved in the persecution of clergy of the canonical Church who refused to collaborate with the Nazis or participate in the schism.

In 1944, Skrypnyk went to Canada. In 1990, he was elected "Patriarch of Kiev and All Ukraine" by the UAOC in the St. Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv, and in 1992, at the "unification council" of the UAOC and supporters of the former Metropolitan Filaret Denysenko, Mstyslav Skrypnyk was proclaimed "patriarch" of the newly created UOC-KP. A year later, he died in the USA.

Earlier, it was reported that in Kharkiv, Greek Catholics proposed renaming a street after Cardinal Joseph Slipyi.

Read also

Hundreds of Orthodox Bukovynians come to support Met. Longin at the court

During the court session, the bishop reported feeling unwell.

Judge to UOJ journalist: What are we supposed to do, listen to you?

At a court session, judges refused to listen to the defense speech of UOJ journalist Valeriy Stupnitsky.

400,000 Germans quit Catholic Church in 2023, study finds

The trend remains alarming for Church leaders and Catholics alike, according to sources in Germany.

Dumenko's congratulatory message removed from BOC Sofia Metropolis website

The message from the head of the OCU to the newly elected Patriarch of Bulgaria has been removed from the website of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church's Sofia Metropolis.

Amsterdam announces U.S. TV film broadcast on UOC persecution

The film features interviews with experts and victims of the state's persecution of the UOC, including Ukrainian Armed Forces soldiers and journalists.

MP publishes documents regarding the incompetence of KSRIFE experts

According to Dmytruk, KSRIFE has long lost touch with reality and churns out fantastical expert reports left and right.