Poroshenko: We care what Church we have, that’s why we have won Tomos

Former President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko. Photo: Facebook

Former president of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko and his team won the Tomos because they do care what kind of Church there is in Ukraine. The politician said this in a peculiar video congratulation of Ukrainians on the Day of Unity of Ukraine.   

Poroshenko’s video became a kind of response to the New Year’s greetings of Vladimir Zelensky, in which the President in particular said that “there’s no difference near which monument you are waiting for the girl you are in love with.”

Petro Poroshenko called the words of the President “a false prophetic appeal” and stated that the Ukrainians did not accept it.

“Like, what's the difference, the Ukrainian language or Russian?” Poroshenko bitterly addressed the audience, “the Moscow Church or ours”?

The former president expressed confidence that "the majority of Ukrainians are patriots and statesmen who do care".

Poroshenko continued this line in the church sphere: “We care what kind of Church we have and for this reason we secured the Tomos. We understand that the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine is not just a denomination but an instrument of Russia's geopolitical influence. However, citizens are free to choose their path to God, even if some still choose their path through Moscow.”

Poroshenko also believes that his team laid the foundation for the construction of new roads in Ukraine but at the same time said that "the nation is not cemented with asphalt but with shared values."

“We are all one family, with the exception of those who raised weapons against Ukraine,” the MP concluded.

Recall that in 2018, Poroshenko said that the UOC will no longer have “grandstanding”. He later promised that there would be no state-run church in the country. And already in the summer of 2019 he announced that the principle of non-interference of the state in the affairs of the Church, enshrined in the Constitution of Ukraine, was only a beautiful theory.

Read also

Thousands in Ghana Enter Canonical Orthodox Church After Year-Long Catechism

Major growth for Patriarchate of Alexandria as former independent group unites with Orthodox Church.

Antiochian Archdiocese to Celebrate Sunday of All Saints of Antioch With Patriarchate of Antioch for First Time

The feast, established in 2023, highlights the enduring witness and legacy of the Church of Antioch.

Church of Cyprus Defrocks Priest Amid Mounting Ecclesiastical Tensions

Fr. Dimos Serkelidis removed from clerical office following Synodal Court decision; controversy grows over internal Church governance

OCU Holds Service in Seized Cherkasy Church—But Nobody Came

Photos reveal nearly deserted worship in St. Andrew’s Church after its seizure from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC)

Romanian Orthodox Hierarchs Propose Five Women for Canonization

Canonization effort highlights upcoming Commemorative Year of Holy Women in 2026.

St. Olga of Alaska Officially Glorified in Her Hometown of Kwethluk

First North American female saint honored in historic vigil attended by hundreds of pilgrims and hierarchs.