Ukrainian Ministry of Culture and Police Arrive to “Inventory” Holy Relics at the Lavra

On the morning of March 28, a commission arrived at the Near Caves of the Kiev-Pechersk Lavra to “inventory and check” the holy relics in the Near Caves, according to the Monastery's lawyer, Archpriest Nikita Chekman.

One of the Reserve's employees arrived with a bolt cutter to cut the locks, another was seen carrying a grinder - ensuring access to one of the holiest sites in the Orthodox Christian world could not be denied.

Members of the commission, and their police detail, plan to open the reliquaries of the Lower Caves, count the relics of the saints and take samples for DNA examination.

Employees of the Ministry of Culture are simultaneously carrying out similar actions in the Far Caves.

On March 5, 2025, an order was signed for the creation of a commission for this purpose. According to the document, the commission must verify the "presence of the remains of saints in the tombs of the Near and Far Caves of the National Reserve 'Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra" and assess their historical and scientific value. If any items qualify as cultural valuables, they will be included in special lists for further reporting.

The Ministry of Culture has classified the commission’s findings, labeling them as "restricted access information." The commission is headed by Volodymyr Shornikov, director of the Department for the Protection and Preservation of Cultural Heritage. The inspection is personally overseen by the Minister of Culture, Mykola Tochitsky.

The basis of the lists used by the Ministry of Culture are those prepared by the Ukrainian Soviet Republic in 1967. In late January, a new draft inventory list was sent to the renowned Pochaev Lavra - delivered by the SBU. A statement released by the dean of the monastery, Hieromonk Andriy, stated that "in addition to the 1967 list of 58 items, this [new list] includes nearly all movable valuables of the Lavra that have never been inventoried before. This includes the incorrupt relics of Venerable Job, abbot of Pochaev, and Venerable Amphilochius." 

One would imagine that if the government were concerned with preserving cultural heritage, they would allow the institution which has preserved these sites and items for the last thousand years to continue to do so. 

 

Read also

Is Lying a Sin?

Why was the Ninth Commandment not expressed directly, Thou shall not lie ? Because a lie is not something that comes out of the mouth. It’s what comes out of the heart.

The Kyiv Post Proves Our Point

How media narratives about UOJ-USA and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church collapse under their own citations

Christian Zionism Is a Heresy

Last week, the Patriarchs and Heads of the Churches in Jerusalem condemned Christian Zionism. This is long overdue. Christian Zionism is a dangerous and heretical ideology. It distorts the clear teaching of Scripture and the Fathers: that the Church, not the Zionist state, is the true Israel of God. Worse yet, it leads Christians in the West to ignore—or even cheer on—the eradication of indigenous Christian communities in the Holy Land.

Vatican I Debunks Itself: A Response to Erick Ybarra

While converting from Catholicism to Orthodoxy, I realized the strongest argument against papal infallibility isn’t buried in obscure patristic quotes. It’s screaming from the plain text of Vatican I itself: the papacy it promises simply doesn’t exist.

Sorin vs. Yasi: The Curse of Infallibility

Papal infallibility, intended as a gift to clarify doctrine, has instead become "Schrödinger's Pope"—a source of profound confusion because Catholics cannot agree on when or how often it has been exercised, rendering it practically useless for defining the boundaries of faith and causing more doctrinal chaos than it resolves.

Smoke, Mirrors, and Bad Faith: A Response to John Jackson’s “Analysis”

A detailed rebuttal of false claims, selective evidence, and activist framing presented as journalism