OCU serves meat porridge to people on fasting day at seized UOC cathedral
Near the seized St. Michael's Cathedral of the UOC on Friday, the OCU serves people meat porridge. Photo: t.me/kozakTv1
On November 8, representatives of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) in Cherkasy, who had forcefully seized the St. Michael’s Cathedral of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC), attempted to gather people for the church feast day by the revised Julian calendar. According to the kozakTv1 Telegram channel, the event was intended to show widespread support for the takeover of the Orthodox shrine.
"According to our sources, the OCU canceled services in almost all of their churches across Cherkasy region and brought in most of their clergy for this event," the report said. "However, the spectacle failed. Even the free distribution of meat porridge on a fasting day next to the cathedral didn’t help."
The channel notes that on a regular Sunday, the vast, seized cathedral remains empty.
"Residents of Cherkasy do not visit the holy site, where hired OCU enforcers looted and injured Orthodox Christians," added the journalists.
As the UOJ previously reported, a UOC hierarch urged the faithful to pray for the return of the cathedral seized by the OCU.
Read also
Another sacrilege of OCU raiders in Cherkasy Cathedral of UOC shown online
Torn out and trampled crosses – this is how representatives of the OCU abused priestly vestments.
UOC parishes in Bila Tserkva defend their right to land under churches
Believers of the Bila Tserkva Eparchy are suing the city council for the right to use the land under their churches.
U.S. politician criticizing UOC persecution to head Trump’s Department
Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk will lead the U.S. Department of Government Efficiency.
Serbian Patriarch calls for interfaith dialogue
According to Patriarch Porfirije, interfaith dialogue is not conversion and does not tolerate exclusivity.
Head of the Anglican Church resigns
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has resigned over child abuse failings.
Study: Videos and photos on the Internet can affect and change thinking
The average user spends 6 hours and 40 minutes online each day, making the images we see a significant part of our visual perception.