Russian passport of OCU "metropolitan" in Crimea published on the Net
Clement Kushch and Epiphany Dumenko. Photo: pomisna.info
In response to the decision of the head of the OCU Epiphany Dumenko to make “Archbishop” Clement of Simferopol and Crimea “metropolitan”, photos of the “hierarch's” Russian passport were published on the Web.
“Vladyka Clement led the OCU eparchy in Crimea in such a way that nothing was left of it,” says the message of the pro-Filaret Facebook-community “For the Ukrainian Church”, which published the photos. - <...> Clement (Pavel Kushch) was one of the first on the Crimean peninsula to run and take the passport of a citizen of the Russian Federation from the hands of the occupation authorities. However, he did not refuse the passport of Ukraine. Clement became a citizen of Putin's Russia on June 6, 2014, at the height of Putin's aggression. In the forefront.”
Supporters of the UOC-KP also recalled a certain "laissez-passer" that allowed Kushch to move throughout Russia, stressing that "such freedom in Putin's totalitarian country is hard to imagine without the FSB's sanction."
“OCU-SCU is that political, quasi-religious structure where many things are intertwined: political ambitions, money, lies, betrayal, the interests of Russia, Istanbul, but the main thing is lacking – faith and spirituality,” resumed the pro-Filaret resource.
Earlier, "hierarch" Clement Kushch said that the problem of the OCU existence in Crimea is "under the personal control" of US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo.
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.