Volunteer: There were no torture chambers in Borodianka temple

The Borodianka church. Photo: church-site.kiev.ua

Volunteer Pavlo, who was in Borodianka in February 2022, said that there were no torture rooms in the St Michael’s Church, reports the Telegram channel DOZOR on "Kozal 1".

Pavlo said that in February 2022 he, together with nine volunteers, was taking food to Borodianka. At that time there was no food at all in the settlement, on the approach to Borodianka they were met by Russian troops and brought to the church to the rector Archpriest Victor Talko.

"They gave us shelter on the first floor. There were rooms there, we were put there. The military ordered us to close the windows and forbade us to go outside. For almost four days, we were on the territory of the temple. The sisters fed us, we had food and everything. They took away our documents, mobile phones too. Thank God, we were not tortured, nothing like that happened. Everyone went about his business. I dug the vegetable garden and helped nuns in the greenhouse – they were growing tomatoes," said Pavlo.

According to him, Father Victor almost never communicate with the Russian military, the military almost never entered the territory of the church.

"Maybe only to draw water, that's all. They were mostly around the perimeter. I didn't see them taking food there, or any conversations. There was no such thing between Father Victor and them. People who had died were brought in. They asked where to bury them. The bodies were decomposing, it was pitiful to look at it all. As a Baptist I didn't go to church, I prayed. Frankly speaking, I had my father's little Bible with me, and I read it and the Psalms. I asked the Lord to keep us safe, and prayed for the boys, of course," he added.

Pavlo refuted the words of volunteers from Babintsi settlement that allegedly there were underground torture chambers in the Borodianka church.

"There were no underground rooms in the church. I did not see any violence. There were Babintsy residents, they were not with us. What they were telling... Well, I don't know. Perhaps they found some tunnels somewhere in there (smiles), but I doubt it. We were all pretty much together. It's a small area. There was a greenhouse. There was another room, there were products there. But they were not Russian rations – that's 100 %. They were usual products of the church. Maybe, the parishioners brought them. The store room was behind the room where we lived, but there was no basement anywhere. And in the temple, I doubt there are any such rooms at all. As for us being tortured and kept in the basement – there was no such thing, that's 100%. At least, the guys and I would have known that. We all came out together," he concluded.

As reported, Borodianka parishioners denied accusations against their rector.

 

Read also

GOARCH Sets 2026 Clergy-Laity Congress for Cleveland

GOARCH will convene its 2026 Clergy-Laity Congress in Cleveland, highlighting parish renewal under the theme “Rise and Build,” alongside major Philoptochos and young-adult gatherings.

Monastic Vocations Gathering Draws Young Men to St. Peter's Monastery

Visit from Hilandar abbot highlights growing interest in Orthodox monastic life in America.

HCHC Wins $7.5 Million Lilly Endowment Grant to Revamp Priestly Formation

Grant will fund redesigned Master of Divinity program with extensive parish-based training.

Islamists Desecrate Orthodox and Presbyterian Churches in Sudan

Two Port Sudan churches were defaced with Islamic graffiti, highlighting rising anti-Christian hostility amid the Sudanese civil war.

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa Falls Asleep in the Lord

The Tokyo-born performer will be remembered for decades of film and TV work. In 2015, he was baptized into the Orthodox faith, taking the name Panteleimon.

Midwest Churches to Host Lectures Marking 100 Years Since St. Tikhon’s Repose

Holy Trinity Seminary professor Protodeacon Andrei Psarev will tour the Midwest to deliver a lecture series honoring St. Tikhon of Moscow as "The First Patriarch of the New World."