Drabinko: Words about Bukovyna being “non-Ukrainian” have no ethnic slant
Alexander (Drabinko), "hierarch" of the OCU, said the UOJ publications citing his words about Bukovyna residents lacking Ukrainian roots were "a hideous provocation".
Ex-Metropolitan Alexander (Drabinko) commented profusely on the response of the Bukovyna residents to his words that "these people do not have special Ukrainian roots." On his Facebook page, Drabinko said, “The Union of Orthodox Journalists, these Muscovite-rootless people, had better not pit me against my Ukrainians-Bukovynians! Anyone who is misled by the so-called UOJ on the Day of Unity of Ukraine saying that ‘Bukovyna residents are allegedly non-Ukrainian’ and who, having read this disgusting provocation, were offended, I strongly recommend that you turn to the original source and watch and listen carefully to what was said."
Drabinko also added that “there is no national or ethnic connotation in what he said. There is only a subjective characteristic of an era and an individual person without generalizations."
Let us remind you that Alexander (Drabinko), in an interview with Ostap Drozdov, commented on his attitude towards His Beatitude Onuphry, in which, in particular, he said, “A native of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, Metropolitan Onuphry is from Bukovyna himself. Bukovyna joined the Soviet Ukraine after Romania participated in the war with the Soviet Union. And we must not forget that these people have no special Ukrainian roots ... they are absent.”
Drabinko’s statement caused a backlash from Bukovyna residents.
Doctor of Historical Sciences, Professor of Chernivtsi National University Mykhailo Chuchko, in his commentary to the UOJ correspondent, said that “the former bishop, who left the canonical Church, does not know ethnic statistics, basic history and, accordingly, misleads people”: “There is a census of 1910, according to the population, the majority in the northern part of Bukovyna were Ukrainians, and in the southern part – Romanians," said the historian. Therefore, claims that Bukovynians are a kind of "non-Ukrainians", if we talk about Chernivtsi region, about those people who lived in the territory at that time (the birth of His Beatitude – Ed.) – this is a distortion of the facts and mere ignorance."
The UOC Diocese of Chernivtsi-Bukovyna stated that Drabinko's words about the Bukovyna residents and His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry as people without "Ukrainian roots" are insulting. Archimandrite Nikita (Storozhuk), secretary of the diocese, in a conversation with the UOJ correspondent said that representatives of many nationalities live in the Chernivtsi region, but Drabinko's assertion about the “non-Ukrainianness” of Bukovyna people “are offensive for those 70% of the region's residents who consider themselves Ukrainians and speak Ukrainian.”
The archimandrite said that there are villages in the region where the majority speak Romanian, but in the Vyzhnytsi district, where the Primate of the UOC was born and which is located in the Carpathian foothills, all villages are Ukrainian-speaking.