UOC-owned real estate database published in the media

16 September 12:55
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Photo: UOJ Photo: UOJ

The Church's land plot count was calculated based on open registries.

NGL Media has published a real estate registry belonging to religious communities of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. According to the presented data, the largest number of real estate properties is located in Kyiv and the Kyiv region, while the smallest number is in the Lviv region. The registry is posted on the official website of the organization.

According to the calculations, the total number of properties owned and used by religious organizations of the UOC amounts to 6,674. Of these, 3,798 are land plots, and 2,876 are religious buildings.

The researchers explained how they conducted their analysis: "First, we compiled a list of all organizations that have the word 'Orthodox' (in various grammatical cases) in their name, including registered religious communities. After that, we filtered out the organizations of the UOC-MP, removing other Orthodox confessions and denominations from the list."

Additionally, the journalists compared the data with the UOC church registry from Opendatabot and discovered that some communities had already transitioned to the OCU, although they are still listed as UOC in the Opendatabot registry.

"We refined the list of active UOC communities and organizations, considering the aforementioned nuances, and asked YouControl analysts to provide a database of real estate (land and buildings) registered under the UOC-MP. It is worth noting that this data does not account for properties registered under individuals associated with the UOC-MP.

All the identified properties were compiled into a unified database and mapped to specific addresses," the study states.

Most of the property is municipally owned and used by UOC religious communities based on rental or permanent use agreements. However, there are also properties that are privately owned, primarily in Kyiv and its region.

Thus, in Kyiv and the Kyiv region, the UOC owns 1,520 and 850 hectares of land, respectively. In the Odesa region, it owns 258 hectares; in the Donetsk region, 243 hectares; in the Sumy region, 189 hectares; in the Kharkiv region, 180 hectares; in the Dnipropetrovsk region, 170 hectares; in the Chernihiv region, 159 hectares; in the Vinnytsia region, 193 hectares; in the Chernivtsi region, 138 hectares; in the Rivne region, 135 hectares; in the Cherkasy region, 113 hectares; in the Poltava region, 103 hectares; in the Zakarpattia region, 98 hectares; in the Mykolaiv region, 95 hectares; in the Zaporizhzhia region, 94 hectares; in the Kherson region, 73 hectares; in the Volyn region, 70 hectares; in the Khmelnytskyi region, 58 hectares; in the Kirovohrad region, 43 hectares; in the Zhytomyr region, 38 hectares; in the Luhansk region, 29 hectares; in the Ternopil region, 18 hectares; in the Ivano-Frankivsk region, 5 hectares; in Crimea, 4 hectares; and in the Lviv region, 1 hectare.

As the UOJ reported, Oleksandr Sahan stated that law 8371, which aims to ban the activities of the UOC, does not propose the forced closure of churches. However, religious communities renting municipal property will face certain challenges.

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