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Patriarch Kirill of Moscow

Kirill or Cyril (Russian: Кирилл, Church Slavonic: Ст҃ѣ́йшїй патрїа́рхъ кѷрі́ллъ, secular name Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev, Russian: Владимир Михайлович Гундяев; born 20 November 1946) is a Russian Orthodox bishop. He became Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus' and Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church on 1 February 2009.

Kirill
Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus'
Patriarch Kirill in 2023
ChurchRussian Orthodox Church
SeeMoscow
Installed1 February 2009
PredecessorAlexy II
Orders
Ordination7 April 1969
Consecration14 March 1976
by Nikodim (Rotov)
Personal details
Born
Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev

(1946-11-20) 20 November 1946 (age 76)
DenominationEastern Orthodox Church
Alma materLeningrad Theological Academy
Signature
Coat of arms
Styles of
Patriarch Kirill
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious stylePatriarch

Prior to becoming Patriarch, Kirill was Archbishop (later Metropolitan) of Smolensk and Kaliningrad beginning on 26 December 1984, and also Chairman of the Russian Orthodox Church's Department for External Church Relations and a permanent member of the Holy Synod beginning in 1989.

A close ally of Russian leader Vladimir Putin, Kirill has described Putin's rule as "a miracle of God."[1] According to Putin, Kirill's father baptized him.[1] During his tenure as Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus', Kirill has brought the Russian Orthodox Church closer to the Russian state.[2] Kirill's relationship with Bartholomew I of Constantinople, Ecumenical Patriarch and the spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Christians worldwide, has been tense.[3] After Kirill lauded Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, clergy in other Orthodox dioceses condemned Kirill's remarks, with Bartholomew I saying that Kirill's support for Putin and the war were "damaging to the prestige of the whole of Orthodoxy."[3]

Early life and career

Kirill was born Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev in Leningrad (present-day Saint Petersburg) on 20 November 1946. His father, Rev. Mikhail Gundyaev, died in 1974. His mother, Raisa Gundyaeva, a teacher of German, died in 1984. His elder brother, Archpriest Nikolay Gundyaev, is a professor at Leningrad Theological Academy and rector of the Holy Transfiguration Cathedral in St. Petersburg. His grandfather, Rev. Vasily Gundyaev, a Solovki prisoner, was imprisoned and exiled in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s for his church activity and struggle against Renovationism.[4][5]

After finishing the eighth grade (year 9), Vladimir Gundyayev got a job in the Leningrad Geological Expedition and worked for it from 1962 to 1965 as cartographer, combining work with studies at secondary school.[4] After graduation from school, he entered the Leningrad Seminary and later the Leningrad Theological Academy, from which he graduated cum laude in 1970.[5]

On 3 April 1969, Metropolitan Nicodemus (Rotov) of Leningrad and Novgorod tonsured him with the name of Kirill after saint Cyril the Philosopher and on 7 April ordained him as hierodeacon and on 1 June as hieromonk.[4] From 1970 to 1971, Father Kirill taught Dogmatic Theology and acted as rector's assistant for students' affairs at the Leningrad Theological Schools and at the same time worked as personal secretary to Metropolitan Nicodem and supervising instructor of the first-grade seminarians.[4]

Episcopal ministry

Archimandrite

On 12 September 1971, Kirill was elevated to the rank of archimandrite and was posted as a representative of the Russian Orthodox Church to the World Council of Churches (WCC) in Geneva. On 26 December 1974, he was appointed rector of the Leningrad Academy and Seminary. Since December 1975, he has been a member of the WCC central committee and executive committee.[4]

In 1971, he was appointed representative of the Moscow Patriarchate at the World Council of Churches and has been actively involved in the ecumenical activity of the Russian Orthodox Church since then.[4]

Since 1994, Kirill has hosted a weekly Orthodox television program "Слово пастыря" (The Word of the Shepherd) on ORT/Channel One.[4]

Archbishop

 
Kirill I at a conference on nuclear weapons and disarmament in Amsterdam in 1981
 
Vladimir Putin, Metropolitan Kirill and Xenia Sheremeteva-Yusupova, October 2001
  • On 14 March 1976, Archimandrite Kirill was consecrated Bishop of Vyborg, Vicar of the Leningrad diocese.
  • On 2 September 1977, he was elevated to the rank of archbishop.
  • From 26 December 1984, he was Archbishop of Smolensk and Vyazma.
  • From 1986 – administrator of the parishes in the Kaliningrad Region.
  • From 1988, he became Archbishop of Smolensk and Kaliningrad.
  • On 13 November 1989, he was appointed chairman of the department for external church relations and permanent member of the Holy Synod.
  • On 25 February 1991, Archbishop Kirill was elevated to the rank of metropolitan.

The Supreme Authority of the Church charged Kirill with the following functions:

  • from 1975 to 1982 – chairman of the Leningrad Diocesan Council;
  • from 1975 to 1998 – member of the Central and Executive Committees of the World Council of Churches;
  • from 1976 to 1978 – deputy Patriarchal Exarch for Western Europe;
  • from 1976 to 1984 – member of the Holy Synod commission for Christian unity;
  • from 1978 to 1984 – administrator of the Patriarchal Parishes in Finland;
  • from 1978 to 1988 – member of the Millennium of the Baptism of Russia preparatory commission;
  • in 1990 – member of the preparatory commission for the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church;
  • in 1990 – member of the commission for assistance in overcoming the consequences of the Chernobyl accident;
  • from 1989 to 1996 – administrator of the Hungarian Orthodox deanery;
  • from 1990 to 1991 – temporary administrator of the diocese of the Hague and Netherlands;
  • from 1990 to 1993 – temporary administrator of the diocese of Korsun;
  • from 1990 to 1993 – chairman of the Holy Synod commission for reviving religious and moral.[4]

Foreign relations

On 20 October 2008, while on a tour of Latin America, he had a meeting with First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Fidel Castro. Castro commended Metropolitan Kirill as his ally in combating "American imperialism".[6][7][8] Kirill awarded Fidel and Raúl Castro the Order of St. Daniel of Moscow on behalf of Patriarch Alexy II in recognition of their decision to build the first Russian Orthodox Church in Havana, to serve the Russian expatriates living there.[9]

He was criticised by some for the ROC's failures in the Diocese of Sourozh and Ukraine.[10][11][12]

Patriarch of Moscow

 
Kirill being presented with the patriarchal koukoulion during his enthronement

On 6 December 2008, the day after the death of Patriarch Alexy II, the Russian Holy Synod elected him locum tenens of the Patriarchal throne. On 9 December, during the funeral service for Alexey II in Christ the Saviour Cathedral (which was broadcast live by Russia's state TV channels), he was seen and reported to have fainted at one point.[13][14] On 29 December, when talking to journalists, he said he was opposed to any reforms of a liturgical or doctrinal nature in the Church.[15] On 27 January 2009, the ROC Local Council (the 2009 Pomestny Sobor) elected Kirill I of Moscow as Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus;[16][17] with 508 votes out of 700.)[18] He was enthroned on 1 February 2009.

Ecumenism

 
Russian religious leaders (Armenian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Orthodox, Old Believer) during the official celebrations of the National Unity Day, 4 November 2012

The conservative wing in the Russian Orthodox Church criticized Kirill for practicing ecumenism throughout the 1990s. In 2008, breakaway Bishop Diomid of Anadyr and Chukotka criticized him for associating himself with the Catholic Church.[19] However, in a 2009 statement, Kirill stated that there could be no doctrinal compromise with the Catholic Church, and that discussions with them did not have the goal of seeking unification.[20]

On 12 February 2016, Kirill and Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, met at José Martí International Airport near Havana, Cuba, and signed a thirty point joint declaration, prepared in advance, addressing global issues including their hope for re–establishment of full unity, the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, the Syrian Civil War and church organisation in Ukraine.[21][22] This was the first meeting between a pope and a Russian Orthodox patriarch.[23]

On 3 September 2019, Kirill and Paulose II, the head of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, met at the Patriarchal and Synod residence in St. Daniel Monastery, Moscow. During this meeting, Kirill supported the proposals made by Paulose II for cooperation in academics pertaining to iconography, church choristers, monasticism, pilgrimages, summer institutes and academic conferences.[24]

Administrative reform

Patriarch Kirill introduced significant changes in the administrative structure of the Church. On 31 March 2009, the Holy Synod, at its first meeting under the chairmanship of the newly elected Patriarch Kirill, reformed the DECR, forming new synodal institutions, which were entrusted with certain areas of activity previously dealt with by the DECR.[25] The Department for Church-Society Relations [ru], independent from the DECR,[citation needed] was created; this department was responsible for "the implementation of relations with legislative bodies, political parties, professional and creative unions, and other civil society institutions in the canonical territory of the Moscow Patriarchate." Dioceses, representative offices [ru], metochions, monasteries and stavropegic parishes far abroad, which were previously under the authority of the DECR, were directly subordinated to the Patriarch of Moscow of All Russia; to manage them, the Moscow Patriarchate's Secretariat for Institutions Abroad[a] was created. The Synodal Information Department [ru] was created.[25] The post-graduate department of the Moscow Theological Academy, which operated under the DECR, was transformed into the All-Church postgraduate and doctoral school named after Saints Cyril and Methodius Equal-to-the-Apostles [ru].[26][27]

On 27 July 2011, the Holy Synod of the Church established the Central Asian Metropolitan District, reorganizing the structure of the Church in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan.[28] Since 6 October 2011, at the request of the Patriarch, the diocesan reform began, in which 2–3 dioceses were created on the territory of one region instead of one with the formation of a metropolis (Russian: митрополия, mitropoliya), administrative structure bringing together neighboring eparchies.[29]

Foreign relations

 
Kirill and archbishop Józef Michalik signing a joint declaration to the Polish and Russian people at the Royal Castle in Warsaw (2012)
 
Kirill is greeted by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff as he arrives at the Alvorada Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, 19 February 2016

Kirill "heartily congratulated"[30] Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko for winning the Belarusian presidency in 2010[31][32][33] in a non-democratic election.[34]

According to the Financial Times, "Keenly aware that Putin's actions severely undermined his authority in Ukraine, Kirill refused to absorb Crimea's parishes and boycotted a ceremony in the Kremlin to celebrate Russia's annexation."[35]

During the Orthodox Church of Ukraine autocephaly controversy, Patriarch Kirill was the presiding chairman of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church when the decision was made to break Eucharistic communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate on 15 October 2018.[36]

In 2019, he created a working committee with the Malankara Orthodox Church.[24]

After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Kirill praised the invasion.[37][1] Kirill blamed the conflict on "gay parades" and made baseless claims that Ukraine was "exterminating" Russians in Donbass,[38][37] Kirill's remarks prompted clergy in some other Orthodox dioceses to condemn Kirill's remarks and seek independence from the Moscow church.[38][39]

Relations with Vladimir Putin

Kirill is a long-time ally of president Vladimir Putin.[38][37]

When Kirill was elected Patriarch on 27 January 2009, by the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church by secret vote he gained 508 out of 702 votes and enthroned during liturgy at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, Moscow on 1 February 2009 the service was attended, among others, by President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and then prime minister Vladimir Putin.[40]

The following day, Russian president Dmitry Medvedev hosted a reception (a formal banquet[41][42]) for the ROC bishops in the Grand Kremlin Palace, where Patriarch Kirill held forth about the Byzantine concept of symphonia as his vision of the ideal of church-state relations, though acknowledging that it was not possible to fully attain to it in Russia today.[43][44][45]

On 8 February 2012, at a meeting of religious leaders in Moscow, Kirill contrasted the economic and social chaos of the 1990s with the 2000s and said "What were the 2000s then? Through a miracle of God, with the active participation of the country's leadership, we managed to exit this horrible, systemic crisis", and likened anti-government protesters' "demands to "ear-piercing shrieks" and said the protesters represented a minority of Russians."[46]

In cultural and social affairs, the Church under Kirill has collaborated closely with the Russian state under President Vladimir Putin.[47]

Patriarch Kirill has backed the expansion of Russian power into Crimea and eastern Ukraine.[48][49] Despite calling for the "speedy restoration of peace",[50][51] Patriarch Kirill also referred to Moscow's opponents in Ukraine as "evil forces", stating "we must not allow dark and hostile external forces to laugh at us."[52]

He has been described as a "committed nationalist of the imperial variety", as someone "who thinks nothing of using the familiar words of a faith to their most egregious effect".[53]

Public controversies

Importation of cigarettes

 
Patriarch Kirill at Easter 2011

Journalists of the newspapers Kommersant and Moskovskij Komsomolets accused Kirill of profiteering and abuse of the privilege of duty-free importation of cigarettes granted to the church in the mid-1990s and dubbed him "Tobacco Metropolitan".[54] The Department for External Church Relations was alleged to have acted as the largest supplier of foreign cigarettes in Russia.[55] The profits of this operation allegedly under Kirill's direction were estimated to have totaled $1.5 billion by sociologist Nikolai Mitrokhin in 2004, and at $4 billion by The Moscow News in 2006.[56][57] However, Nathaniel Davis said that "There is no evidence that Metropolitan Kirill has actually embezzled funds. What is more likely is that profits from the importation of tobacco and cigarettes have been used for urgent, pressing Church expenses."[55] The duty-free importation of cigarettes ended in 1997.[55] In his 2002 interview with Izvestia, Metropolitan Kirill called the allegations about his profiteering a political campaign against him.[58]

Alexander Pochinok, who was the minister of taxes and levies (1999–2000), said in 2009 that Kirill had no involvement in the violations.[59][60]

Ambition

In 2007 Kirill stated his goal of establishing a global Eastern Orthodox movement in Greece, Cyprus, Ukraine, Belarus, various Balkan states, Georgia, Armenia, and Moldova.[61]

Electioneering for Putin's 2012 campaign

In February 2012 Patriarch Kirill said that Putin's rule is a miracle.[62] He openly supported Putin's presidential bid in 2012 and said that Putin corrected the historically wrong path of Russia after coming to power, and conducted a special prayer ceremony in honor of Putin's re-election twice, on 7 May 2012 and in May 2018.[63]

Pussy Riot

Three female members of the feminist group Pussy Riot were arrested in March 2012 for performing a song in Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow during which they called on the Virgin Mary to "chase Putin out".[64] The women were arrested for hooliganism[64] and were later sentenced to two years' imprisonment.[65] The song contained swear words offending the church itself, as well as being performed in the part of church near the altar where no laity are allowed to enter.[66][67] This act was considered a desecration and offence by many of Orthodox believers in Russia,[68][69][70][71][72] and depicted as such in media.[67] It was also said that few people had known this feminist group before their act in the cathedral.[73] Commenting on the case, Kirill said they were "doing the work of Satan" and should be punished.[64] This sparked criticism of the Orthodox Church on the Runet for not showing mercy, while Amnesty International described the women as "prisoners of conscience".[64] In their closing statements, members of Pussy Riot said that Patriarch Kirill had used the church to support the cultural position of Putin's government.[74] Polls by Levada Center showed that a majority of Russians thought the punishment of the punk group was excessive, although only six percent of Russian were sympathetic to the group.[68]

Pope Benedict XVI, who was pontiff of the Catholic Church at the time, supported the position of the Russian Orthodox Church on this issue.[75]

Dust compensation dispute

 
Patriarch Kirill and Svetlana Medvedeva at the church ceremony in Sestroretsk

In March 2012, the former Russian Health Minister (1999–2004) Yury Shevchenko, pursuant to a court ruling, paid about 20 million rubles ($676,000) in compensation for the dust resultant from the renovation work that had settled in a flat upstairs in the prestigious House on the Embankment privately owned by Patriarch Kirill and occupied by the Patriarch's long-time friend businesswoman Lidia Leonova.[76][77][78]

"I sold my apartment in St. Petersburg, and we paid the required sum", said Shevchenko's son, also named Yury, in early April 2012.[79]

According to the lawsuit, renovation works in Shevchenko's apartment stirred up a lot of dust, which settled on a collection of valuable books owned by Kirill. The Patriarch confirmed his ownership of the dusty apartment in a private conversation with journalist Vladimir Solovyov.[80]

Most of the reports in the media tended to be critical of Patriarch Kirill and laughing at the claims that the dust was harmful, saying that it was just sand and it would have been far more efficient to just hire a maid to vacuum it up.[77] The Patriarch himself then said he thought it to be inappropriate to forgive Shevchenko.[81]

Breguet watch

 
Patriarch Kirill holds a Christmas service at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, 6 January 2011
 
Patriarch Kirill attends a ceremony to unveil the Wall of Grief monument to victims of Stalinist repressions in October 2017

In 2012, Kirill was accused of wearing a Swiss Breguet watch worth over £20,000 (US$30,000). In an interview with Vladimir Solovyov, Kirill said that he owned a Breguet, among other gifts, but he had never worn it.[82] Concerning a photo which appeared to show him wearing the Breguet at a liturgy, Kirill stated "I was looking at that picture and suddenly I understood - it was a collage! But after that photograph was posted I began examining. As many people come and make presents. And often there are boxes that were never opened and you don't know what is there. And I found out that in fact there is Breguet watch, so I've never given commentaries that the Patriarch doesn't have it. There is a box with Breguet, but I've never worn it."[83] This triggered at least one Internet blogger to study the issue and collect images of Kirill's wristwear.[84] Some time later, photographs on his official website showed him wearing what appeared to be an expensive watch on his left wrist,[85] and later one even showed the watch airbrushed out, but with a reflection of it still visible on the table's glossy surface.[86] Later, it was stated by the Russian Church officials that it was a 24-year-old employee who "acted out of stupid, unjustifiable and unauthorized initiative" in editing the photo.[87] It was also stated that "the guilty ones [for the image manipulation] will be punished severely".[85][86]

A spokesperson added that it was "unethical" to discuss Kirill's private life, and the Russian Orthodox Church said on 4 April 2012 that foreign forces were taking revenge on it for supporting Putin: "The attacks have become more prominent during the pre-election and post-election period [... This] shows their political and also anti-Russian motives."[88]

In June 2012, Kirill was given the 2011 Silver Shoe Award [ru] (given in Russia each year "for the most dubious achievements in show business") for "immaculate disappearance of a watch" in the category "Miracles up to the elbows". The award found a pained reaction from representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church.[89]

Support for Russia's 2015 intervention in Syria

In 2015, Kirill's envoy delivered his letter to Russian servicemen at Russia's Khmeimim Air Base in Syria. The letter claimed that Russians troops in Syria are to deliver love and peace with the hope of Jesus Christ's descending to Syria.[90] Kirill also said that Russia's actions in Syria are just.[91]

Same-sex marriage

In 2016, Kirill stated that silencing priests that speak against same-sex marriage is similar to censorship, such as those that existed under Soviet totalitarianism. In May 2017, he again likened silencing such priests to totalitarianism seen in Nazi Germany, and referred to same-sex marriage as a threat to family values during a visit to Kyrgyzstan.[92]

Rapprochement with the Catholic Church

In February 2016 Pope Francis I and he held the first-ever meeting between the leaders of the Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.[93]

Statement that Bulgarians should only thank Russia for their liberation

During Kirill's visit to Bulgaria in 2018 in honor of the 140th anniversary of Bulgaria's liberation from the Ottoman empire, Bulgaria's president Rumen Radev said he thanks all ethnicities that were struggling for Bulgaria's independence from the Ottomans as a part of Russia's Imperial Army: Russians, Romanians, Finns, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Poles, Lithuanians, Serbs, Montenegrins.[94]

In response, Kirill criticised the statement and said Bulgarians should only thank Russia, not anyone else, and that there was no place for "false interpretations of history".[95] Kirill also added that Bulgarians have been known since the Soviet era for being bad speechmakers, who are unable to speak without paper notes.[96]

In turn, Bulgaria's Vice Prime Minister Valeri Simeonov called Kirill a "2nd rate KGB agent", "the Tobacco Metropolitan" (see relevant article: Tobacco scandal [ru]) and said Kirill is "not a saint".[97] After a litigation launched by a local Bulgarian pro-Russian activist, a local court found there was no defamation in Simeonov's words.[98]

Ban of Jehovah's Witnesses

Since the 1990s, Kirill has advocated for banning Jehovah's Witnesses.[99] Under Kirill's leadership, he remained the chief architect behind the ban of 170,000 Jehovah's Witnesses in 2017.[100] On 2 May 2017, the Russian Orthodox Church issued a press release stating, "Russian Orthodox Church supports [the] ban on Jehovah's Witnesses in Russia," and again, on 13 February 2019, it reiterated full support of the ban.[101] Sam Brownback, a U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom, stated, "You may agree or disagree with their [Jehovah's Witnesses'] ideology, but they are peaceful practitioners of faith, and they are entitled to practice their faith." Since then, the United Nations and others have accused Russia of human rights abuses.[102]

KGB affiliation

Forbes reported on 20 February 2009 that, "Kirill, who was the Metropolitan of Smolensk, succeeds Alexei II who died in December after 18 years as head of the Russian Church. According to material from the Soviet archives, Kirill was a KGB agent (as was Alexei). This means he was more than just an informer, of whom there were millions in the Soviet Union. He was an active officer of the organization. Neither Kirill nor Alexei ever acknowledged or apologized for their ties with the security agencies."[103]

Further reporting from 7 March 2022 from The Guardian's Emma Graham-Harrison interviewed local Ukrainians for their opinions about Kirill and the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine. The response was mostly a pessimistic view of Kirill and his motives towards Ukraine based on his past as a KGB agent:

Like many Ukrainians who no longer trust the Russian-linked churches in their country, Yuir is particularly wary of the Moscow Patriarch, Kirill, who according to material from Soviet archives was a government agent before the fall of the USSR. "Kirill is a KGB guy, and he supports all aggression against Ukraine," he said, but asked not to give his last name, worried like many in the town about community tensions about the church. "He's a bastard, not a religious leader."[104]

Statement about the tragedy of existence of post-Soviet states

In his sermon on 28 May 2022, Kirill stated that Vladimir Lenin had "tragically" dismembered "the historical Russia" into different countries, signing decrees destroying the country, which was a terrible decision that still leads to consequences even today.[105]

Sanctions

On 9 April 2015, at a meeting with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Patriarch Kirill thanked him for his geopolitical support he gives to Russia and called the sanctions imposed on Russia for the occupation of Crimea and the aggression in Donbas "illegal and unfair."[106][107]

On 4 May 2022, Kirill was included in a list of 58 entities proposed for sanctions by the European Commission in relation to the invasion of Ukraine, according to Agence France-Presse.[108][109] However, later reports stated that he was removed from the list following intervention by the Hungarian government.[110]

Kirill was sanctioned earlier in 2022 by Canada,[111] Ukraine and the United Kingdom, the latter saying that "Patriarch Kirill has made multiple public statements in support of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He therefore engages in, provides support for, or promotes any policy or action which destabilizes Ukraine or undermines or threatens the territorial integrity, sovereignty or independence of Ukraine.”[112]

Positions regarding Ukraine and Ukrainians prior to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

On 18 July 2014, despite Russia's intervention in Donbas and Russia's occupation of Crimea (during which Putin, according to his own statement, threatened to use nuclear weapons in case of resistance to the Russians[113]), Kirill said that Russia poses no military threat to anyone.[114]

On the same day, Putin stated that he wants to involve Patriarch Kirill as a negotiator for the peace process in Ukraine.[115]

On 14 August 2014, in an address to the heads of other Orthodox churches, Patriarch Kirill stated that the anti-terrorist operation in Eastern Ukraine is a war to eradicate Orthodoxy, waged by Catholics and Ukrainian Orthodox Autocephalists, whom he called "schismatics".[116]

On 25 December 2017, according to the website of Russia's administration of Crimea, Patriarch Kirill by his decree awarded the head of the Russian administration of Crimea Sergey Aksyonov and the head of the Russian "State Council of Crimea" Volodymyr Kostiantynov (both contributed to the occupation of Crimea and are wanted in Ukraine on charges of committing the actions aimed at seizing power by force, subverting the constitutional order, Ukraine's territorial integrity, and charges of committing a treason against the state and creating a criminal organization[117]) with two church awards, respectively, the Order of St. Prince Daniel of Moscow of the 2nd rank and the Order of St. Seraphim of Sarov of the 2nd rank.[118]

In May 2019, Patriarch Kirill said that the people who set ablaze the Odessa Trade Unions House "were possessed of the Devil", but didn't condemn Odessa anti-Maidan activists who had killed two Maidan activists, Igor Ivanov and Andrei Biryukov, on the same day earlier.[119]

During the vote on amendments to Russia's constitution, Kirill called upon Russians to support the amendments. While he explicitly mentioned a single amendment, the one that adds the mention of faith in God, saying that even atheists should vote for it, the voting itself was actually about the entire set of amendments, with people voting on all amendments at once, instead of voting on each amendment individually, one-by-one. Among the amendments was the amendment to protect Russia's territorial integrity, which prohibits negotiations on the transfer of Russia's territories to other countries.[119]

On 15 October 2021, at the opening of the VII Congress of Russian Compatriots in Moscow, he accused the West of trying to impose "false narratives" about World War II, stating the need to "protect" compatriots and Russians from Russia around the world, and said that not only do parishes of The Moscow Patriarchate unite Russians, Ukrainians and Belarusians through religion, but also through Russian language. Kirill urged families of these peoples to teach their own children to love their "historical homeland" Russia and to raise their children as Russophones.[120]

Support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, 2022

 
"We do not want to fight with anyone. Russia has never attacked anyone. It is surprising that a large and powerful country has never attacked anyone, it has only defended its borders."

Patriarch Kirill has referred to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine as "current events" and has avoided using terms like war or invasion,[121] thereby complying with Russian censorship law.[122] Kirill approves the invasion, and has blessed the Russian soldiers fighting there. As a consequence, several priests of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine have stopped mentioning Kirill's name during the divine service.[123] The Moscow patriarchate views Ukraine as a part of their "canonical territory". Kirill has said that the Russian army has chosen a very correct way.[124]

Kirill sees gay pride parades as a part of the reason behind Russian warfare against Ukraine.[125] He has said that the war is not physically, but rather metaphysically, important.[126]

In the days after the world learned about the 2022 Bucha massacre by Russian invaders of Ukraine, Kirill said that his faithful should be ready "protect our home" under any circumstance.[112]

On 6 March 2022 (Forgiveness Sunday holiday), during the liturgy in the Church of Christ the Savior, he justified Russia's attack on Ukraine, stating that it was necessary to side with "Donbas" (i.e. Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republic), where he said there is an ongoing 8-year "genocide" by Ukraine and where, Kirill said, Ukraine wants to enforce gay pride events upon local population. Despite the holiday being dedicated to the concept of forgiveness, Kirill said there can't be forgiveness without delivering "justice" first, otherwise it's a capitulation and weakness.[127] The speech came under international scrutiny, as Kirill parroted President Putin's claim that Russia was fighting "fascism" in Ukraine.[53] Throughout the speech, Kirill did not use the term "Ukrainian", but rather referred to both Russians and Ukrainians simply as "Holy Russians", also claiming Russian soldiers in Ukraine were "laying down their lives for a friend", referencing the Gospel of John.[53]

On 9 March 2022, after the liturgy, he declared that Russia has the right to use force against Ukraine to ensure Russia's security, that Ukrainians and Russians are one people, that Russia and Ukraine are one country, that the West incites Ukrainians to kill Russians to sow discord between Russians and Ukrainians and gives weapons to Ukrainians for this specific purpose, and therefore the West is an enemy of Russia and God.[128]

In a letter to the World Council of Churches (WCC) sent in March 2022, Kirill justified the attack on Ukraine by NATO enlargement, the protection of Russian language, and the establishment of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. In this letter, he did not express condolences over deaths among Ukrainians.[129][130]

Kirill participated in a Zoom video call with Pope Francis on 16 March 2022, of which Francis stated in an interview[131] that Kirill "read from a piece of paper he was holding in his hand all the reasons that justify the Russian invasion."[108]

On 27 March 2022, Kirill expressed his support for the actions of Rosgvardiya in Ukraine, praising its fighters for performing their military duty, and wished them God's help in this matter.[132]

In the aftermath of the Bucha massacre on 3 April, Kirill, speaking in the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces, Kirill praised the armed forces for "feats" of service, saying Russia is "peaceful".[133]

Representatives of the Vatican have criticized Kirill for his lack of willingness to seek peace in Ukraine.[134] On 3 April, the former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams said there was a strong case for expelling the Russian Orthodox Church from the WCC, saying, "When a Church is actively supporting a war of aggression, failing to condemn nakedly obvious breaches of any kind of ethical conduct in wartime, then other Churches do have the right to raise the question ... I am still waiting for any senior member of the Orthodox hierarchy to say that the slaughter of the innocent is condemned unequivocally by all forms of Christianity."[135]

The Russian Orthodox St Nicholas church in Amsterdam, Netherlands, has declared that it is no longer possible to function within the Moscow patriarchate because of the attitude that Kirill has to the Russian invasion, and instead requested to join the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.[136] The Russian-Orthodox Church in Lithuania has declared that they do not share the political views and perception of Kirill and therefore are seeking independence from Moscow.[137]

On 10 April 2022, 200 priests from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) released an open request to the primates of the other autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Churches, asking them to convene a Council of Primates of the Ancient Eastern Churches at the Pan-Orthodox level and try Kirill for the heresy of preaching the "Doctrine of the Russian world" and the moral crimes of "blessing the war against Ukraine and fully supporting the aggressive nature of Russian troops on the territory of Ukraine." They noted that they "can't continue to remain in any form of canonical subordination to the Moscow Patriarch," and requested that the Council of Primates "bring Patriarch Kirill to justice and deprive him of the right to hold the patriarchal throne."[138][139]

On 23 May 2022, Kirill stated that Russian schoolchildren must take Russian troops fighting against Ukraine as an example of heroic behaviour.[140]

When the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) removed itself from the Moscow Patriarchate on 27 May 2022, Kirill claimed that the "spirits of malice" wanted to separate the Russian and Ukrainian peoples but they will not succeed.[141] Although this breakaway Ukrainian Orthodox Church now claims that 'any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with Moscow were excluded' the Russian Orthodox Church ignores this and continues to include UOC-MP clerics in its various commissions or working groups despite these individuals not agreeing to this nor even wanting to be included.[142]

Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, said that the patriarch's legitimization of the "brutal and absurd war" is "a heresy."[143]

Kirill supported the mobilization of citizens to go to the front in Ukraine, he urged citizens to fulfill their military duty and that if they gave their lives for their country they will be with God in his kingdom.[144][145][146]

On 5 January, Patriarch Kirill released a statement: "I, Kirill, Patriarch of Moscow and of all Rus, appeal to all parties involved in the internecine conflict with a call to cease fire and establish a Christmas truce from 12:00 on January 6 to 00:00 on January 7 so that Orthodox people can attend services on Christmas Eve and on the day of the Nativity of Christ," through the Church's official website.[147]

Criticism

An open letter of concern was addressed by a number of significant clerics to the orthodox christian faithful in the aftermath of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. It read in part:

The speeches of President Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill (Gundiaev) of Moscow (Moscow Patriarchate) have repeatedly invoked and developed Russian world ideology over the last 20 years. In 2014, when Russia annexed the Crimea and initiated a proxy war in the Donbas area of Ukraine, right up until the beginning of the full-fledged war against Ukraine and afterwards, Putin and Patriarch Kirill have used Russian world ideology as a principal justification for the invasion. The teaching states that there is a transnational Russian sphere or civilization, called Holy Russia, or Holy Rus', which includes Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus (and sometimes Moldova and Kazakhstan), as well as ethnic Russians and Russian-speaking people throughout the world. It holds that this "Russian world" has a common political centre (Moscow), a common spiritual centre (Kyiv as the "mother of all Rus"), a common language (Russian), a common church (the Russian Orthodox Church, Moscow Patriarchate), and a common patriarch (the Patriarch of Moscow), who works in 'symphony' with a common president/national leader (Putin) to govern this Russian world, as well as upholding a common distinctive spirituality, morality, and culture.

— A Declaration on the "Russian World" (Russkii mir) Teaching (2022)[148][149]

Personal life

Wealth

According to a Forbes article in 2006, Kirill's wealth was $4 billion,[150] and a 2019 Novaya Gazeta report estimated his worth at $4 billion to $8 billion, although the figures have not been verified.[151] According to a 2020 investigation by Proekt, Kirill and two of his second cousins owned nine separate pieces of real estate worth $2.87 million in the Moscow Region and St. Petersburg.[151]

In 2009, Kirill was photographed wearing a $30,000 gold Breguet watch.[152] Officials associated with the Moscow Patriarchate airbrushed the watch (but not its reflection on the table at which Kirill was sitting)[152] out of the photo,[1] while Kirill claimed that the watch had been doctored into the image.[153] Kirill later admitted that he did in fact own the watch.[153]

Honours and awards

Church awards

Russian Orthodox Church
  • Order of St. Prince Vladimir 2nd class (16 September 1973)
  • Order of St. Sergius of Radonezh, 1st and 2nd class
  • Order of the Holy Prince Daniel of Moscow, 1st class
  • Order of St. Innocent Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna, 2nd class
  • Order of St. Alexis the Metropolitan of Moscow and All Russia, 2nd class
  • Named Panagia (1988) – for active participation in the preparation and conduct of the Jubilee celebrations of the 1000th anniversary of Christianity in Russia
  • Order of Saint Anthony and Theodosius of the Caves, 1st class (UOC-MP, 2006)
  • Order of Saint Stephen the Great pious governor, 2nd class (Orthodox Church of Moldova, 2006) – in recognition of diligent service, and the glory of the Orthodox Church in Moldova
  • Silver Jubilee Medal of St. Apostle Peter (St. Petersburg diocese, 2003)
  • Order in honour of the 450th anniversary of bringing the land Pochayiv Volyn icons (UOC-MP, 2009)
  • Order of St. Theodosius of Chernigov (Ukrainian Orthodox Church, 2011)
Awards of local orthodox churches
  • Order of Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem, Georgian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Hellenic, Poland, the Czech Lands and Slovakia, Finland and America.
  • Order of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, I degree (Antiochian Orthodox Church, 2011)[citation needed]
  • Gold Medal of St. Innocent (2009, The Orthodox Church in America)[citation needed]
Awards of other churches and denominations

Awards of the Russian Federation

  • Order of Merit for the Fatherland;
    • 2nd class (20 November 2006) – for his great personal contribution to the spiritual and cultural traditions and strengthening friendship between peoples
    • 3rd class (11 August 2000) – for outstanding contribution to the strengthening of civil peace and the revival of spiritual and moral traditions
  • Order of Alexander Nevsky (7 January 2011) – for outstanding personal contribution to the Motherland in the preservation of spiritual and cultural traditions
  • Order of Friendship (28 December 1995) – for services to the state, the progress made in implementing a comprehensive program of construction, reconstruction and restoration of historic and cultural sites in Moscow
  • Order of Friendship of Peoples (1988)
  • Medal "50 Years of Victory in Great Patriotic War of 1941–1945."
  • Jubilee Medal "300th Anniversary of Russian Navy" (1996)
  • Medal "In memory of the 850th anniversary of Moscow" (1997)
  • Gratitude of the President of the Russian Federation (14 August 1995) – for active participation in the preparation and conduct of the 50th anniversary of Victory in Great Patriotic War of 1941–1945
  • Diploma of the State Duma of the Russian Federation (2001)

Foreign awards

Honorary citizenships

Lukoyanovsky District of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (2000), Smolensk Oblast (5 February 2009), Kaliningrad Oblast (5 March 2009), Kemerovo Oblast (2010), Smolensk (2003), the selo of Rizskoye of Smolensk Oblast (2004), Neman of Kaliningrad Oblast (2006), Vyazemsky District of Smolensk Oblast (2006), Kaliningrad (2006), Khoroshyovo-Mnyovniki District of Moscow (2006), Republic of Mordovia (2011 – for outstanding contribution to the preservation and development of domestic spiritual and moral traditions, strengthening of interaction of church and state).

See also

References

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External links

  •   Media related to Patriarch Kirill I at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Patriarch Kirill of Moscow at Wikiquote
  • Official web-site "Slovo Patriarcha" ("The Patriarch's Speech")(in Russian)
  • Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad
  • Patriarch Kirill in the social network VKontakte (official profile)
Eastern Orthodox Church titles
Preceded by Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia
2009–present
Incumbent
Preceded by Metropolitan Bishop of Smolensk
1984–2009
Succeeded by
Theophylact (Kuryanov)

patriarch, kirill, moscow, kirill, cyril, russian, Кирилл, church, slavonic, Ст, йшїй, патрїа, рхъ, кѷрі, ллъ, secular, name, vladimir, mikhailovich, gundyayev, russian, Владимир, Михайлович, Гундяев, born, november, 1946, russian, orthodox, bishop, became, pa. Kirill or Cyril Russian Kirill Church Slavonic St ѣ jshyij patryia rh kѷri ll secular name Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev Russian Vladimir Mihajlovich Gundyaev born 20 November 1946 is a Russian Orthodox bishop He became Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus and Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church on 1 February 2009 KirillPatriarch of Moscow and all Rus Patriarch Kirill in 2023ChurchRussian Orthodox ChurchSeeMoscowInstalled1 February 2009PredecessorAlexy IIOrdersOrdination7 April 1969Consecration14 March 1976by Nikodim Rotov Personal detailsBornVladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev 1946 11 20 20 November 1946 age 76 Leningrad Russian SFSR Soviet UnionDenominationEastern Orthodox ChurchAlma materLeningrad Theological AcademySignatureCoat of arms Styles of Patriarch KirillReference styleHis HolinessSpoken styleYour HolinessReligious stylePatriarchPrior to becoming Patriarch Kirill was Archbishop later Metropolitan of Smolensk and Kaliningrad beginning on 26 December 1984 and also Chairman of the Russian Orthodox Church s Department for External Church Relations and a permanent member of the Holy Synod beginning in 1989 A close ally of Russian leader Vladimir Putin Kirill has described Putin s rule as a miracle of God 1 According to Putin Kirill s father baptized him 1 During his tenure as Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus Kirill has brought the Russian Orthodox Church closer to the Russian state 2 Kirill s relationship with Bartholomew I of Constantinople Ecumenical Patriarch and the spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Christians worldwide has been tense 3 After Kirill lauded Russia s 2022 invasion of Ukraine clergy in other Orthodox dioceses condemned Kirill s remarks with Bartholomew I saying that Kirill s support for Putin and the war were damaging to the prestige of the whole of Orthodoxy 3 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Episcopal ministry 2 1 Archimandrite 2 2 Archbishop 2 3 Foreign relations 3 Patriarch of Moscow 3 1 Ecumenism 3 2 Administrative reform 3 3 Foreign relations 3 4 Relations with Vladimir Putin 4 Public controversies 4 1 Importation of cigarettes 4 2 Ambition 4 3 Electioneering for Putin s 2012 campaign 4 4 Pussy Riot 4 5 Dust compensation dispute 4 6 Breguet watch 4 7 Support for Russia s 2015 intervention in Syria 4 8 Same sex marriage 4 9 Rapprochement with the Catholic Church 4 10 Statement that Bulgarians should only thank Russia for their liberation 4 11 Ban of Jehovah s Witnesses 4 12 KGB affiliation 4 13 Statement about the tragedy of existence of post Soviet states 4 14 Sanctions 4 15 Positions regarding Ukraine and Ukrainians prior to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 4 16 Support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 5 Criticism 6 Personal life 6 1 Wealth 7 Honours and awards 7 1 Church awards 7 2 Awards of the Russian Federation 7 3 Foreign awards 7 4 Honorary citizenships 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and careerKirill was born Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev in Leningrad present day Saint Petersburg on 20 November 1946 His father Rev Mikhail Gundyaev died in 1974 His mother Raisa Gundyaeva a teacher of German died in 1984 His elder brother Archpriest Nikolay Gundyaev is a professor at Leningrad Theological Academy and rector of the Holy Transfiguration Cathedral in St Petersburg His grandfather Rev Vasily Gundyaev a Solovki prisoner was imprisoned and exiled in the 1920s 1930s and 1940s for his church activity and struggle against Renovationism 4 5 After finishing the eighth grade year 9 Vladimir Gundyayev got a job in the Leningrad Geological Expedition and worked for it from 1962 to 1965 as cartographer combining work with studies at secondary school 4 After graduation from school he entered the Leningrad Seminary and later the Leningrad Theological Academy from which he graduated cum laude in 1970 5 On 3 April 1969 Metropolitan Nicodemus Rotov of Leningrad and Novgorod tonsured him with the name of Kirill after saint Cyril the Philosopher and on 7 April ordained him as hierodeacon and on 1 June as hieromonk 4 From 1970 to 1971 Father Kirill taught Dogmatic Theology and acted as rector s assistant for students affairs at the Leningrad Theological Schools and at the same time worked as personal secretary to Metropolitan Nicodem and supervising instructor of the first grade seminarians 4 Episcopal ministryArchimandrite On 12 September 1971 Kirill was elevated to the rank of archimandrite and was posted as a representative of the Russian Orthodox Church to the World Council of Churches WCC in Geneva On 26 December 1974 he was appointed rector of the Leningrad Academy and Seminary Since December 1975 he has been a member of the WCC central committee and executive committee 4 In 1971 he was appointed representative of the Moscow Patriarchate at the World Council of Churches and has been actively involved in the ecumenical activity of the Russian Orthodox Church since then 4 Since 1994 Kirill has hosted a weekly Orthodox television program Slovo pastyrya The Word of the Shepherd on ORT Channel One 4 Archbishop Kirill I at a conference on nuclear weapons and disarmament in Amsterdam in 1981 Vladimir Putin Metropolitan Kirill and Xenia Sheremeteva Yusupova October 2001 On 14 March 1976 Archimandrite Kirill was consecrated Bishop of Vyborg Vicar of the Leningrad diocese On 2 September 1977 he was elevated to the rank of archbishop From 26 December 1984 he was Archbishop of Smolensk and Vyazma From 1986 administrator of the parishes in the Kaliningrad Region From 1988 he became Archbishop of Smolensk and Kaliningrad On 13 November 1989 he was appointed chairman of the department for external church relations and permanent member of the Holy Synod On 25 February 1991 Archbishop Kirill was elevated to the rank of metropolitan The Supreme Authority of the Church charged Kirill with the following functions from 1975 to 1982 chairman of the Leningrad Diocesan Council from 1975 to 1998 member of the Central and Executive Committees of the World Council of Churches from 1976 to 1978 deputy Patriarchal Exarch for Western Europe from 1976 to 1984 member of the Holy Synod commission for Christian unity from 1978 to 1984 administrator of the Patriarchal Parishes in Finland from 1978 to 1988 member of the Millennium of the Baptism of Russia preparatory commission in 1990 member of the preparatory commission for the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church in 1990 member of the commission for assistance in overcoming the consequences of the Chernobyl accident from 1989 to 1996 administrator of the Hungarian Orthodox deanery from 1990 to 1991 temporary administrator of the diocese of the Hague and Netherlands from 1990 to 1993 temporary administrator of the diocese of Korsun from 1990 to 1993 chairman of the Holy Synod commission for reviving religious and moral 4 Foreign relations On 20 October 2008 while on a tour of Latin America he had a meeting with First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Fidel Castro Castro commended Metropolitan Kirill as his ally in combating American imperialism 6 7 8 Kirill awarded Fidel and Raul Castro the Order of St Daniel of Moscow on behalf of Patriarch Alexy II in recognition of their decision to build the first Russian Orthodox Church in Havana to serve the Russian expatriates living there 9 He was criticised by some for the ROC s failures in the Diocese of Sourozh and Ukraine 10 11 12 Patriarch of Moscow Kirill being presented with the patriarchal koukoulion during his enthronement On 6 December 2008 the day after the death of Patriarch Alexy II the Russian Holy Synod elected him locum tenens of the Patriarchal throne On 9 December during the funeral service for Alexey II in Christ the Saviour Cathedral which was broadcast live by Russia s state TV channels he was seen and reported to have fainted at one point 13 14 On 29 December when talking to journalists he said he was opposed to any reforms of a liturgical or doctrinal nature in the Church 15 On 27 January 2009 the ROC Local Council the 2009 Pomestny Sobor elected Kirill I of Moscow as Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus 16 17 with 508 votes out of 700 18 He was enthroned on 1 February 2009 Ecumenism Russian religious leaders Armenian Jewish Muslim Buddhist Orthodox Old Believer during the official celebrations of the National Unity Day 4 November 2012 The conservative wing in the Russian Orthodox Church criticized Kirill for practicing ecumenism throughout the 1990s In 2008 breakaway Bishop Diomid of Anadyr and Chukotka criticized him for associating himself with the Catholic Church 19 However in a 2009 statement Kirill stated that there could be no doctrinal compromise with the Catholic Church and that discussions with them did not have the goal of seeking unification 20 On 12 February 2016 Kirill and Pope Francis the head of the Roman Catholic Church met at Jose Marti International Airport near Havana Cuba and signed a thirty point joint declaration prepared in advance addressing global issues including their hope for re establishment of full unity the persecution of Christians in the Middle East the Syrian Civil War and church organisation in Ukraine 21 22 This was the first meeting between a pope and a Russian Orthodox patriarch 23 On 3 September 2019 Kirill and Paulose II the head of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church met at the Patriarchal and Synod residence in St Daniel Monastery Moscow During this meeting Kirill supported the proposals made by Paulose II for cooperation in academics pertaining to iconography church choristers monasticism pilgrimages summer institutes and academic conferences 24 Administrative reform See also Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate Patriarch Kirill s decentralisation Patriarch Kirill introduced significant changes in the administrative structure of the Church On 31 March 2009 the Holy Synod at its first meeting under the chairmanship of the newly elected Patriarch Kirill reformed the DECR forming new synodal institutions which were entrusted with certain areas of activity previously dealt with by the DECR 25 The Department for Church Society Relations ru independent from the DECR citation needed was created this department was responsible for the implementation of relations with legislative bodies political parties professional and creative unions and other civil society institutions in the canonical territory of the Moscow Patriarchate Dioceses representative offices ru metochions monasteries and stavropegic parishes far abroad which were previously under the authority of the DECR were directly subordinated to the Patriarch of Moscow of All Russia to manage them the Moscow Patriarchate s Secretariat for Institutions Abroad a was created The Synodal Information Department ru was created 25 The post graduate department of the Moscow Theological Academy which operated under the DECR was transformed into the All Church postgraduate and doctoral school named after Saints Cyril and Methodius Equal to the Apostles ru 26 27 On 27 July 2011 the Holy Synod of the Church established the Central Asian Metropolitan District reorganizing the structure of the Church in Tajikistan Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan 28 Since 6 October 2011 at the request of the Patriarch the diocesan reform began in which 2 3 dioceses were created on the territory of one region instead of one with the formation of a metropolis Russian mitropoliya mitropoliya administrative structure bringing together neighboring eparchies 29 Foreign relations Kirill and archbishop Jozef Michalik signing a joint declaration to the Polish and Russian people at the Royal Castle in Warsaw 2012 Kirill is greeted by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff as he arrives at the Alvorada Palace in Brasilia Brazil 19 February 2016 Kirill heartily congratulated 30 Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko for winning the Belarusian presidency in 2010 31 32 33 in a non democratic election 34 According to the Financial Times Keenly aware that Putin s actions severely undermined his authority in Ukraine Kirill refused to absorb Crimea s parishes and boycotted a ceremony in the Kremlin to celebrate Russia s annexation 35 During the Orthodox Church of Ukraine autocephaly controversy Patriarch Kirill was the presiding chairman of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church when the decision was made to break Eucharistic communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate on 15 October 2018 36 In 2019 he created a working committee with the Malankara Orthodox Church 24 After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 Kirill praised the invasion 37 1 Kirill blamed the conflict on gay parades and made baseless claims that Ukraine was exterminating Russians in Donbass 38 37 Kirill s remarks prompted clergy in some other Orthodox dioceses to condemn Kirill s remarks and seek independence from the Moscow church 38 39 Relations with Vladimir Putin Kirill is a long time ally of president Vladimir Putin 38 37 When Kirill was elected Patriarch on 27 January 2009 by the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church by secret vote he gained 508 out of 702 votes and enthroned during liturgy at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour Moscow on 1 February 2009 the service was attended among others by President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and then prime minister Vladimir Putin 40 The following day Russian president Dmitry Medvedev hosted a reception a formal banquet 41 42 for the ROC bishops in the Grand Kremlin Palace where Patriarch Kirill held forth about the Byzantine concept of symphonia as his vision of the ideal of church state relations though acknowledging that it was not possible to fully attain to it in Russia today 43 44 45 On 8 February 2012 at a meeting of religious leaders in Moscow Kirill contrasted the economic and social chaos of the 1990s with the 2000s and said What were the 2000s then Through a miracle of God with the active participation of the country s leadership we managed to exit this horrible systemic crisis and likened anti government protesters demands to ear piercing shrieks and said the protesters represented a minority of Russians 46 In cultural and social affairs the Church under Kirill has collaborated closely with the Russian state under President Vladimir Putin 47 Patriarch Kirill has backed the expansion of Russian power into Crimea and eastern Ukraine 48 49 Despite calling for the speedy restoration of peace 50 51 Patriarch Kirill also referred to Moscow s opponents in Ukraine as evil forces stating we must not allow dark and hostile external forces to laugh at us 52 He has been described as a committed nationalist of the imperial variety as someone who thinks nothing of using the familiar words of a faith to their most egregious effect 53 Public controversiesImportation of cigarettes Patriarch Kirill at Easter 2011 Journalists of the newspapers Kommersant and Moskovskij Komsomolets accused Kirill of profiteering and abuse of the privilege of duty free importation of cigarettes granted to the church in the mid 1990s and dubbed him Tobacco Metropolitan 54 The Department for External Church Relations was alleged to have acted as the largest supplier of foreign cigarettes in Russia 55 The profits of this operation allegedly under Kirill s direction were estimated to have totaled 1 5 billion by sociologist Nikolai Mitrokhin in 2004 and at 4 billion by The Moscow News in 2006 56 57 However Nathaniel Davis said that There is no evidence that Metropolitan Kirill has actually embezzled funds What is more likely is that profits from the importation of tobacco and cigarettes have been used for urgent pressing Church expenses 55 The duty free importation of cigarettes ended in 1997 55 In his 2002 interview with Izvestia Metropolitan Kirill called the allegations about his profiteering a political campaign against him 58 Alexander Pochinok who was the minister of taxes and levies 1999 2000 said in 2009 that Kirill had no involvement in the violations 59 60 Ambition In 2007 Kirill stated his goal of establishing a global Eastern Orthodox movement in Greece Cyprus Ukraine Belarus various Balkan states Georgia Armenia and Moldova 61 Electioneering for Putin s 2012 campaign In February 2012 Patriarch Kirill said that Putin s rule is a miracle 62 He openly supported Putin s presidential bid in 2012 and said that Putin corrected the historically wrong path of Russia after coming to power and conducted a special prayer ceremony in honor of Putin s re election twice on 7 May 2012 and in May 2018 63 Pussy Riot Three female members of the feminist group Pussy Riot were arrested in March 2012 for performing a song in Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow during which they called on the Virgin Mary to chase Putin out 64 The women were arrested for hooliganism 64 and were later sentenced to two years imprisonment 65 The song contained swear words offending the church itself as well as being performed in the part of church near the altar where no laity are allowed to enter 66 67 This act was considered a desecration and offence by many of Orthodox believers in Russia 68 69 70 71 72 and depicted as such in media 67 It was also said that few people had known this feminist group before their act in the cathedral 73 Commenting on the case Kirill said they were doing the work of Satan and should be punished 64 This sparked criticism of the Orthodox Church on the Runet for not showing mercy while Amnesty International described the women as prisoners of conscience 64 In their closing statements members of Pussy Riot said that Patriarch Kirill had used the church to support the cultural position of Putin s government 74 Polls by Levada Center showed that a majority of Russians thought the punishment of the punk group was excessive although only six percent of Russian were sympathetic to the group 68 Pope Benedict XVI who was pontiff of the Catholic Church at the time supported the position of the Russian Orthodox Church on this issue 75 Dust compensation dispute Patriarch Kirill and Svetlana Medvedeva at the church ceremony in Sestroretsk In March 2012 the former Russian Health Minister 1999 2004 Yury Shevchenko pursuant to a court ruling paid about 20 million rubles 676 000 in compensation for the dust resultant from the renovation work that had settled in a flat upstairs in the prestigious House on the Embankment privately owned by Patriarch Kirill and occupied by the Patriarch s long time friend businesswoman Lidia Leonova 76 77 78 I sold my apartment in St Petersburg and we paid the required sum said Shevchenko s son also named Yury in early April 2012 79 According to the lawsuit renovation works in Shevchenko s apartment stirred up a lot of dust which settled on a collection of valuable books owned by Kirill The Patriarch confirmed his ownership of the dusty apartment in a private conversation with journalist Vladimir Solovyov 80 Most of the reports in the media tended to be critical of Patriarch Kirill and laughing at the claims that the dust was harmful saying that it was just sand and it would have been far more efficient to just hire a maid to vacuum it up 77 The Patriarch himself then said he thought it to be inappropriate to forgive Shevchenko 81 Breguet watch Patriarch Kirill holds a Christmas service at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior 6 January 2011 Patriarch Kirill attends a ceremony to unveil the Wall of Grief monument to victims of Stalinist repressions in October 2017 In 2012 Kirill was accused of wearing a Swiss Breguet watch worth over 20 000 US 30 000 In an interview with Vladimir Solovyov Kirill said that he owned a Breguet among other gifts but he had never worn it 82 Concerning a photo which appeared to show him wearing the Breguet at a liturgy Kirill stated I was looking at that picture and suddenly I understood it was a collage But after that photograph was posted I began examining As many people come and make presents And often there are boxes that were never opened and you don t know what is there And I found out that in fact there is Breguet watch so I ve never given commentaries that the Patriarch doesn t have it There is a box with Breguet but I ve never worn it 83 This triggered at least one Internet blogger to study the issue and collect images of Kirill s wristwear 84 Some time later photographs on his official website showed him wearing what appeared to be an expensive watch on his left wrist 85 and later one even showed the watch airbrushed out but with a reflection of it still visible on the table s glossy surface 86 Later it was stated by the Russian Church officials that it was a 24 year old employee who acted out of stupid unjustifiable and unauthorized initiative in editing the photo 87 It was also stated that the guilty ones for the image manipulation will be punished severely 85 86 A spokesperson added that it was unethical to discuss Kirill s private life and the Russian Orthodox Church said on 4 April 2012 that foreign forces were taking revenge on it for supporting Putin The attacks have become more prominent during the pre election and post election period This shows their political and also anti Russian motives 88 In June 2012 Kirill was given the 2011 Silver Shoe Award ru given in Russia each year for the most dubious achievements in show business for immaculate disappearance of a watch in the category Miracles up to the elbows The award found a pained reaction from representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church 89 Support for Russia s 2015 intervention in Syria In 2015 Kirill s envoy delivered his letter to Russian servicemen at Russia s Khmeimim Air Base in Syria The letter claimed that Russians troops in Syria are to deliver love and peace with the hope of Jesus Christ s descending to Syria 90 Kirill also said that Russia s actions in Syria are just 91 Same sex marriage In 2016 Kirill stated that silencing priests that speak against same sex marriage is similar to censorship such as those that existed under Soviet totalitarianism In May 2017 he again likened silencing such priests to totalitarianism seen in Nazi Germany and referred to same sex marriage as a threat to family values during a visit to Kyrgyzstan 92 Rapprochement with the Catholic Church In February 2016 Pope Francis I and he held the first ever meeting between the leaders of the Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches 93 Statement that Bulgarians should only thank Russia for their liberation During Kirill s visit to Bulgaria in 2018 in honor of the 140th anniversary of Bulgaria s liberation from the Ottoman empire Bulgaria s president Rumen Radev said he thanks all ethnicities that were struggling for Bulgaria s independence from the Ottomans as a part of Russia s Imperial Army Russians Romanians Finns Ukrainians Belarusians Poles Lithuanians Serbs Montenegrins 94 In response Kirill criticised the statement and said Bulgarians should only thank Russia not anyone else and that there was no place for false interpretations of history 95 Kirill also added that Bulgarians have been known since the Soviet era for being bad speechmakers who are unable to speak without paper notes 96 In turn Bulgaria s Vice Prime Minister Valeri Simeonov called Kirill a 2nd rate KGB agent the Tobacco Metropolitan see relevant article Tobacco scandal ru and said Kirill is not a saint 97 After a litigation launched by a local Bulgarian pro Russian activist a local court found there was no defamation in Simeonov s words 98 Ban of Jehovah s Witnesses Since the 1990s Kirill has advocated for banning Jehovah s Witnesses 99 Under Kirill s leadership he remained the chief architect behind the ban of 170 000 Jehovah s Witnesses in 2017 100 On 2 May 2017 the Russian Orthodox Church issued a press release stating Russian Orthodox Church supports the ban on Jehovah s Witnesses in Russia and again on 13 February 2019 it reiterated full support of the ban 101 Sam Brownback a U S ambassador at large for international religious freedom stated You may agree or disagree with their Jehovah s Witnesses ideology but they are peaceful practitioners of faith and they are entitled to practice their faith Since then the United Nations and others have accused Russia of human rights abuses 102 KGB affiliation Forbes reported on 20 February 2009 that Kirill who was the Metropolitan of Smolensk succeeds Alexei II who died in December after 18 years as head of the Russian Church According to material from the Soviet archives Kirill was a KGB agent as was Alexei This means he was more than just an informer of whom there were millions in the Soviet Union He was an active officer of the organization Neither Kirill nor Alexei ever acknowledged or apologized for their ties with the security agencies 103 Further reporting from 7 March 2022 from The Guardian s Emma Graham Harrison interviewed local Ukrainians for their opinions about Kirill and the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine The response was mostly a pessimistic view of Kirill and his motives towards Ukraine based on his past as a KGB agent Like many Ukrainians who no longer trust the Russian linked churches in their country Yuir is particularly wary of the Moscow Patriarch Kirill who according to material from Soviet archives was a government agent before the fall of the USSR Kirill is a KGB guy and he supports all aggression against Ukraine he said but asked not to give his last name worried like many in the town about community tensions about the church He s a bastard not a religious leader 104 Statement about the tragedy of existence of post Soviet states In his sermon on 28 May 2022 Kirill stated that Vladimir Lenin had tragically dismembered the historical Russia into different countries signing decrees destroying the country which was a terrible decision that still leads to consequences even today 105 Sanctions On 9 April 2015 at a meeting with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras Patriarch Kirill thanked him for his geopolitical support he gives to Russia and called the sanctions imposed on Russia for the occupation of Crimea and the aggression in Donbas illegal and unfair 106 107 On 4 May 2022 Kirill was included in a list of 58 entities proposed for sanctions by the European Commission in relation to the invasion of Ukraine according to Agence France Presse 108 109 However later reports stated that he was removed from the list following intervention by the Hungarian government 110 Kirill was sanctioned earlier in 2022 by Canada 111 Ukraine and the United Kingdom the latter saying that Patriarch Kirill has made multiple public statements in support of the Russian invasion of Ukraine He therefore engages in provides support for or promotes any policy or action which destabilizes Ukraine or undermines or threatens the territorial integrity sovereignty or independence of Ukraine 112 Positions regarding Ukraine and Ukrainians prior to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine On 18 July 2014 despite Russia s intervention in Donbas and Russia s occupation of Crimea during which Putin according to his own statement threatened to use nuclear weapons in case of resistance to the Russians 113 Kirill said that Russia poses no military threat to anyone 114 On the same day Putin stated that he wants to involve Patriarch Kirill as a negotiator for the peace process in Ukraine 115 On 14 August 2014 in an address to the heads of other Orthodox churches Patriarch Kirill stated that the anti terrorist operation in Eastern Ukraine is a war to eradicate Orthodoxy waged by Catholics and Ukrainian Orthodox Autocephalists whom he called schismatics 116 On 25 December 2017 according to the website of Russia s administration of Crimea Patriarch Kirill by his decree awarded the head of the Russian administration of Crimea Sergey Aksyonov and the head of the Russian State Council of Crimea Volodymyr Kostiantynov both contributed to the occupation of Crimea and are wanted in Ukraine on charges of committing the actions aimed at seizing power by force subverting the constitutional order Ukraine s territorial integrity and charges of committing a treason against the state and creating a criminal organization 117 with two church awards respectively the Order of St Prince Daniel of Moscow of the 2nd rank and the Order of St Seraphim of Sarov of the 2nd rank 118 In May 2019 Patriarch Kirill said that the people who set ablaze the Odessa Trade Unions House were possessed of the Devil but didn t condemn Odessa anti Maidan activists who had killed two Maidan activists Igor Ivanov and Andrei Biryukov on the same day earlier 119 During the vote on amendments to Russia s constitution Kirill called upon Russians to support the amendments While he explicitly mentioned a single amendment the one that adds the mention of faith in God saying that even atheists should vote for it the voting itself was actually about the entire set of amendments with people voting on all amendments at once instead of voting on each amendment individually one by one Among the amendments was the amendment to protect Russia s territorial integrity which prohibits negotiations on the transfer of Russia s territories to other countries 119 On 15 October 2021 at the opening of the VII Congress of Russian Compatriots in Moscow he accused the West of trying to impose false narratives about World War II stating the need to protect compatriots and Russians from Russia around the world and said that not only do parishes of The Moscow Patriarchate unite Russians Ukrainians and Belarusians through religion but also through Russian language Kirill urged families of these peoples to teach their own children to love their historical homeland Russia and to raise their children as Russophones 120 Support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 See also Religion and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine We do not want to fight with anyone Russia has never attacked anyone It is surprising that a large and powerful country has never attacked anyone it has only defended its borders Patriarch Kirill has referred to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine as current events and has avoided using terms like war or invasion 121 thereby complying with Russian censorship law 122 Kirill approves the invasion and has blessed the Russian soldiers fighting there As a consequence several priests of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine have stopped mentioning Kirill s name during the divine service 123 The Moscow patriarchate views Ukraine as a part of their canonical territory Kirill has said that the Russian army has chosen a very correct way 124 Kirill sees gay pride parades as a part of the reason behind Russian warfare against Ukraine 125 He has said that the war is not physically but rather metaphysically important 126 In the days after the world learned about the 2022 Bucha massacre by Russian invaders of Ukraine Kirill said that his faithful should be ready protect our home under any circumstance 112 On 6 March 2022 Forgiveness Sunday holiday during the liturgy in the Church of Christ the Savior he justified Russia s attack on Ukraine stating that it was necessary to side with Donbas i e Donetsk and Luhansk People s Republic where he said there is an ongoing 8 year genocide by Ukraine and where Kirill said Ukraine wants to enforce gay pride events upon local population Despite the holiday being dedicated to the concept of forgiveness Kirill said there can t be forgiveness without delivering justice first otherwise it s a capitulation and weakness 127 The speech came under international scrutiny as Kirill parroted President Putin s claim that Russia was fighting fascism in Ukraine 53 Throughout the speech Kirill did not use the term Ukrainian but rather referred to both Russians and Ukrainians simply as Holy Russians also claiming Russian soldiers in Ukraine were laying down their lives for a friend referencing the Gospel of John 53 On 9 March 2022 after the liturgy he declared that Russia has the right to use force against Ukraine to ensure Russia s security that Ukrainians and Russians are one people that Russia and Ukraine are one country that the West incites Ukrainians to kill Russians to sow discord between Russians and Ukrainians and gives weapons to Ukrainians for this specific purpose and therefore the West is an enemy of Russia and God 128 In a letter to the World Council of Churches WCC sent in March 2022 Kirill justified the attack on Ukraine by NATO enlargement the protection of Russian language and the establishment of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine In this letter he did not express condolences over deaths among Ukrainians 129 130 Kirill participated in a Zoom video call with Pope Francis on 16 March 2022 of which Francis stated in an interview 131 that Kirill read from a piece of paper he was holding in his hand all the reasons that justify the Russian invasion 108 On 27 March 2022 Kirill expressed his support for the actions of Rosgvardiya in Ukraine praising its fighters for performing their military duty and wished them God s help in this matter 132 In the aftermath of the Bucha massacre on 3 April Kirill speaking in the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces Kirill praised the armed forces for feats of service saying Russia is peaceful 133 Representatives of the Vatican have criticized Kirill for his lack of willingness to seek peace in Ukraine 134 On 3 April the former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams said there was a strong case for expelling the Russian Orthodox Church from the WCC saying When a Church is actively supporting a war of aggression failing to condemn nakedly obvious breaches of any kind of ethical conduct in wartime then other Churches do have the right to raise the question I am still waiting for any senior member of the Orthodox hierarchy to say that the slaughter of the innocent is condemned unequivocally by all forms of Christianity 135 The Russian Orthodox St Nicholas church in Amsterdam Netherlands has declared that it is no longer possible to function within the Moscow patriarchate because of the attitude that Kirill has to the Russian invasion and instead requested to join the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople 136 The Russian Orthodox Church in Lithuania has declared that they do not share the political views and perception of Kirill and therefore are seeking independence from Moscow 137 On 10 April 2022 200 priests from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate released an open request to the primates of the other autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Churches asking them to convene a Council of Primates of the Ancient Eastern Churches at the Pan Orthodox level and try Kirill for the heresy of preaching the Doctrine of the Russian world and the moral crimes of blessing the war against Ukraine and fully supporting the aggressive nature of Russian troops on the territory of Ukraine They noted that they can t continue to remain in any form of canonical subordination to the Moscow Patriarch and requested that the Council of Primates bring Patriarch Kirill to justice and deprive him of the right to hold the patriarchal throne 138 139 On 23 May 2022 Kirill stated that Russian schoolchildren must take Russian troops fighting against Ukraine as an example of heroic behaviour 140 When the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate removed itself from the Moscow Patriarchate on 27 May 2022 Kirill claimed that the spirits of malice wanted to separate the Russian and Ukrainian peoples but they will not succeed 141 Although this breakaway Ukrainian Orthodox Church now claims that any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with Moscow were excluded the Russian Orthodox Church ignores this and continues to include UOC MP clerics in its various commissions or working groups despite these individuals not agreeing to this nor even wanting to be included 142 Cardinal Kurt Koch president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity said that the patriarch s legitimization of the brutal and absurd war is a heresy 143 Kirill supported the mobilization of citizens to go to the front in Ukraine he urged citizens to fulfill their military duty and that if they gave their lives for their country they will be with God in his kingdom 144 145 146 On 5 January Patriarch Kirill released a statement I Kirill Patriarch of Moscow and of all Rus appeal to all parties involved in the internecine conflict with a call to cease fire and establish a Christmas truce from 12 00 on January 6 to 00 00 on January 7 so that Orthodox people can attend services on Christmas Eve and on the day of the Nativity of Christ through the Church s official website 147 CriticismAn open letter of concern was addressed by a number of significant clerics to the orthodox christian faithful in the aftermath of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine It read in part The speeches of President Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill Gundiaev of Moscow Moscow Patriarchate have repeatedly invoked and developed Russian world ideology over the last 20 years In 2014 when Russia annexed the Crimea and initiated a proxy war in the Donbas area of Ukraine right up until the beginning of the full fledged war against Ukraine and afterwards Putin and Patriarch Kirill have used Russian world ideology as a principal justification for the invasion The teaching states that there is a transnational Russian sphere or civilization called Holy Russia or Holy Rus which includes Russia Ukraine and Belarus and sometimes Moldova and Kazakhstan as well as ethnic Russians and Russian speaking people throughout the world It holds that this Russian world has a common political centre Moscow a common spiritual centre Kyiv as the mother of all Rus a common language Russian a common church the Russian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate and a common patriarch the Patriarch of Moscow who works in symphony with a common president national leader Putin to govern this Russian world as well as upholding a common distinctive spirituality morality and culture A Declaration on the Russian World Russkii mir Teaching 2022 148 149 Personal lifeWealth According to a Forbes article in 2006 Kirill s wealth was 4 billion 150 and a 2019 Novaya Gazeta report estimated his worth at 4 billion to 8 billion although the figures have not been verified 151 According to a 2020 investigation by Proekt Kirill and two of his second cousins owned nine separate pieces of real estate worth 2 87 million in the Moscow Region and St Petersburg 151 In 2009 Kirill was photographed wearing a 30 000 gold Breguet watch 152 Officials associated with the Moscow Patriarchate airbrushed the watch but not its reflection on the table at which Kirill was sitting 152 out of the photo 1 while Kirill claimed that the watch had been doctored into the image 153 Kirill later admitted that he did in fact own the watch 153 Honours and awardsChurch awards Russian Orthodox ChurchOrder of St Prince Vladimir 2nd class 16 September 1973 Order of St Sergius of Radonezh 1st and 2nd class Order of the Holy Prince Daniel of Moscow 1st class Order of St Innocent Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna 2nd class Order of St Alexis the Metropolitan of Moscow and All Russia 2nd class Named Panagia 1988 for active participation in the preparation and conduct of the Jubilee celebrations of the 1000th anniversary of Christianity in Russia Order of Saint Anthony and Theodosius of the Caves 1st class UOC MP 2006 Order of Saint Stephen the Great pious governor 2nd class Orthodox Church of Moldova 2006 in recognition of diligent service and the glory of the Orthodox Church in Moldova Silver Jubilee Medal of St Apostle Peter St Petersburg diocese 2003 Order in honour of the 450th anniversary of bringing the land Pochayiv Volyn icons UOC MP 2009 Order of St Theodosius of Chernigov Ukrainian Orthodox Church 2011 Awards of local orthodox churchesOrder of Alexandria Antioch Jerusalem Georgian Serbian Bulgarian Hellenic Poland the Czech Lands and Slovakia Finland and America Order of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul I degree Antiochian Orthodox Church 2011 citation needed Gold Medal of St Innocent 2009 The Orthodox Church in America citation needed Awards of other churches and denominationsThe Order of St Gregory of Parumala Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church India 2006 154 Order of St Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church Armenia 2010 citation needed Order Sheikh ul Islam Caucasian Muslims Office 2011 citation needed Awards of the Russian Federation Order of Merit for the Fatherland 2nd class 20 November 2006 for his great personal contribution to the spiritual and cultural traditions and strengthening friendship between peoples 3rd class 11 August 2000 for outstanding contribution to the strengthening of civil peace and the revival of spiritual and moral traditions Order of Alexander Nevsky 7 January 2011 for outstanding personal contribution to the Motherland in the preservation of spiritual and cultural traditions Order of Friendship 28 December 1995 for services to the state the progress made in implementing a comprehensive program of construction reconstruction and restoration of historic and cultural sites in Moscow Order of Friendship of Peoples 1988 Medal 50 Years of Victory in Great Patriotic War of 1941 1945 Jubilee Medal 300th Anniversary of Russian Navy 1996 Medal In memory of the 850th anniversary of Moscow 1997 Gratitude of the President of the Russian Federation 14 August 1995 for active participation in the preparation and conduct of the 50th anniversary of Victory in Great Patriotic War of 1941 1945 Diploma of the State Duma of the Russian Federation 2001 Foreign awards Order of Honour Azerbaijan 2010 Order of the Republic Moldova 2011 Medal 65th anniversary of Victory in Great Patriotic War Transnistria 2010 Order of the Republic of Serbia 2021 155 Honorary citizenships Lukoyanovsky District of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast 2000 Smolensk Oblast 5 February 2009 Kaliningrad Oblast 5 March 2009 Kemerovo Oblast 2010 Smolensk 2003 the selo of Rizskoye of Smolensk Oblast 2004 Neman of Kaliningrad Oblast 2006 Vyazemsky District of Smolensk Oblast 2006 Kaliningrad 2006 Khoroshyovo Mnyovniki District of Moscow 2006 Republic of Mordovia 2011 for outstanding contribution to the preservation and development of domestic spiritual and moral traditions strengthening of interaction of church and state See alsoList of Metropolitans and Patriarchs of Moscow Vsevolod ChaplinReferences a b c d Netburn Deborah 29 March 2022 A spiritual defense of the war in Ukraine Putin s patriarch is trying Los Angeles Times Retrieved 25 April 2022 Cichowlas Ola 14 April 2017 Patriarch Kirill From Ambitious Reformer to State Hardliner The Moscow Times Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b MacFarquhar Neil Kishkovsky Sophia 18 April 2022 Ukraine War Divides Orthodox Faithful The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b c d e f g h Biografiya Svyatejshego Patriarha Moskovskogo i vseya Rusi Kirilla Official Website of the Moscow Patriarchate Retrieved 1 December 2012 a b Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia Official Website of the Department of External Church Relations Retrieved 21 August 2012 Fidel Castro considers Metropolitan Kirill his ally in opposing American imperialism Archived 13 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Interfax 23 October 2008 Mitropolit Kirill vstretilsya s Fidelem Kastro ROC official web site 21 October 2008 Fidel Kastro schitaet mitropolita Kirilla svoim soyuznikom v protivostoyanii amerikanskomu imperializmu ROC official web site 21 October 2008 The Russian Orthodox Church awards the Castro brothers Archived 13 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Interfax 20 October 2008 Igrok globalnogo masshtaba 60 letie mitropolita Kirilla cherez prizmu ukrainskih cerkovnyh problem Portal credo ru 27 February 2007 Retrieved 28 September 2010 Mitropolit Kirill posle Ukrainy V minuty triumfa ne greh vspomnit i o neudachah nyneshnego predsedatelya OVCS MP Oleg Vladimirov 1 August 2008 Pervye kievskie itogi metody cerkovnoj vneshnej politiki RPC MP i rol odnoj lichnosti v odnoj istorii Archived 4 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine portal credo ru 24 July 2008 Russians bid farewell to Patriarch at grand funeral Moscow Reuters 9 December 2008 Retrieved 9 December 2008 Upokoilsya s mirom in Russian Moscow Gazeta ru 9 December 2008 Retrieved 9 December 2008 Russia s prospective church leader says opposed to reforms RIA Novosti 29 December 2008 Na Moskovskij Patriarshij Prestol izbran mitropolit Smolenskij i Kaliningradskij Kirill MP official web site 27 January 2009 in Russian Imya novogo Patriarha nazvano Kirill NEWSru 27 January 2009 Neznakomyj patriarh ili Chemu nas uchit istoriya hrama Hrista Spasitelya Archived 1 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Izvestia 26 January 2009 Dzyuban Diomid 19 June 2008 Problems should be solved Problemy nado reshat Problemy nado reshat christian spirit ru Interview in Russian s l Duh hristianina Archived from the original on 11 December 2008 Russian Church against compromise on belief preaching with Catholics Metropolitan Kirill interfax religion com Moscow Interfax 21 January 2009 Archived from the original on 2 February 2009 Erasmus pseud 13 February 2016 From the New World a pope and a patriarch address old world fights The Economist blog London Archived from the original on 15 February 2016 Retrieved 14 February 2016 Historic encounter between the Pope and Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Orthodox and Catholics are brothers not competitors visnews en blogspot com Vatican City Vatican Information Service 13 February 2016 Archived from the original on 13 February 2016 Retrieved 13 February 2016 Includes full text of the Joint Declaration Unity call as Pope Francis holds historic talks with Russian Orthodox Patriarch bbc co uk BBC 12 February 2016 Archived from the original on 13 February 2016 Retrieved 13 February 2016 a b Russian and Malankara Orthodox churches form working committee The New Indian Express Retrieved 31 August 2020 a b ZhURNALY zasedaniya Svyashennogo Sinoda Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi ot 31 marta 2009 goda Oficialnye dokumenty Patriarhiya ru Patriarhiya ru in Russian Retrieved 27 November 2019 V Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi sozdan Sekretariat Moskovskoj Patriarhii po zarubezhnym uchrezhdeniyam Novosti Patriarhiya ru Patriarhiya ru in Russian Retrieved 27 November 2019 Ispolnilos 65 let so dnya osnovaniya Otdela vneshnih cerkovnyh svyazej Pravoslavie Ru www pravoslavie ru Retrieved 27 November 2019 Resheniem Svyashennogo Sinoda obrazovan Sredneaziatskij mitropolichij okrug Novosti Patriarhiya ru Patriarhiya ru Retrieved 7 January 2019 ZhURNALY zasedaniya Svyashennogo Sinoda ot 5 6 oktyabrya 2011 goda Patriarhiya ru Retrieved 7 January 2019 Patriarshee pozdravlenie A G Lukashenko s pereizbraniem na post Prezidenta Respubliki Belarus Patriarh Patriarhiya ru Patriarchia ru 22 December 2010 Retrieved on 1 November 2013 Patriarch Kirill wishes Lukashenko to invariably develop fraternal relations with Russia Interfax Religion 23 December 201 Official Site of the Patriarch of Moscow Patriarshee pozdravlenie A G Lukashenko s pereizbraniem na post Prezidenta Respubliki Belarus Patriarchal congratulations to AG Lukashenko on being re elected as President of the Republic of Belarus 22 December 2010 Interfax Patriarch Kirill wishes Lukashenko to invariably develop fraternal relations with Russia 22 December 2010 A nasty surprise in Belarus The Economist 29 December 2010 Putin and the Patriarchs how geopolitics tore apart the Orthodox church Financial Times 21 August 2019 Statement of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church in connection with the encroachment of the Patriarchate of Constantinople on the canonical territory of the Russian Church Official Website of the Press Service of the Moscow Patriarchate Retrieved 16 October 2018 a b c The Pope the Patriarchs and the Battle to Save Ukraine The New Yorker 12 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 a b c Moscow patriarch stokes Orthodox tensions with war remarks AP NEWS 8 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 US Christian leaders ask Kirill to speak out reconsider comments on Ukraine religionnews com 11 March 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 Orthodox Church enthrones leader BBC 31 January 2009 Retrieved 31 January 2009 Patriarh Kirill prizval Cerkov i gosudarstvo k vzaimodejstviyu NEWSru 2 February 2009 Miedwiediew Panstwo bedzie wspieralo Cerkiew Gazeta Wyborcza 2 February 2009 Arhipastyri uchastniki Pomestnogo Sobora prisutstvovali na prieme v Georgievskom zale Bolshogo kremlevskogo dvorca patriarchi ru 2 February 2009 Priyom ot imeni Prezidenta Rossii v chest arhiereev uchastnikov Pomestnogo sobora Russkoj pravoslavnoj cerkvi Archived 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine kremlin ru 2 February 2009 Slovo Svyatejshego Patriarha Moskovskogo i vseya Rusi Kirilla posle intronizacii 1 fevralya 2009 goda v sobornom Hrame Hrista Spasitelya mospat ru 1 February 2009 Russian patriarch calls Putin era miracle of God Reuters 8 February 2012 Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Bennetts Marc Vladimir Putin Patriarch Kirill alliance puts atheists at risk in Russia The Washington Times Retrieved 30 November 2016 Mr Putin a former KGB officer attends church services and portrays himself as a staunch defender of Christian values In return the Orthodox Church frequently issues public statements of support for Kremlin policies Most recently a church spokesman described Russia s military campaign in Syria part of a holy battle against international terrorism Baczynska Gabriela Heneghan Tom 6 October 2016 How the Russian Orthodox Church answers Putin s prayers in Ukraine Reuters Reuters Retrieved 30 November 2016 The ROC s close ties to the state were on display early in the Ukraine crisis when Kirill and the Russian Foreign Ministry issued nearly identical statements warning against a confrontation and speaking of the larger Russia s brotherly Ukraine When Russia sent its troops to Crimea one of the justifications it used was an alleged threat to parishes there linked to Kirill s Moscow Patriarchate Kirill s full title is Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus a reference to a medieval state in Kiev to which modern Russia traces its roots Woods Mark 3 March 2016 How the Russian Orthodox Church is backing Vladimir Putin s new world order Christian Today Retrieved 1 September 2020 Patriarch Kirill s address to the hierarchs clergy monastics and faithful of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Patriarchate ru Patriarchate ru in Russian Retrieved 26 February 2022 Moscow Patriarch Kirill Ukrainian Orthodox leaders issue calls for peace Religion News Service 24 February 2022 AFP News Agency on Twitter UPDATE The head of the Russian Orthodox Church has called Moscow s opponents in Ukraine evil forces speaking on the fourth day of the Kremlin s invasion of its pro Western neighbour Twitter com Retrieved 28 February 2022 a b c Kelaidis Katherine 4 April 2022 The Russian Patriarch Just Gave His Most Dangerous Speech Yet And Almost No One In the West Has Noticed Religion Dispatches Retrieved 23 May 2022 Mitropolit Smolenskij i Kaliningradskij Kirill portal credo ru a b c Nathaniel Davis 2000 Tribulations trials and Troubles for the Russian Orthodox Church Religion in Eastern Europe 20 6 39 50 Archived 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Bozhestvennye golosa Archived 30 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine The New Times 50 15 December 2008 in Russian Uhodyashij god oznamenovalsya istoricheskim sobytiem dve razdelennye chasti Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Cerkov RPC i Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Cerkov Zagranicej RPCZ podpisali Akt o kanonicheskom obshenii Archived 3 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine The New Times 46 24 December 2007 Mitropolit Kirill Pust blagoslovene Bozhe prebyvaet so vsemi nami Archived 4 September 2012 at archive today Izvestia 24 December 2002 Byvshij glava nalogovoj sluzhby Rossii oprovergaet sluhi o prichastnosti mitropolita Kirilla k torgovle alkogolem i tabakom 22 January 2009 RPC i tabachnye akcizy kak eto bylo 21 yanvarya 2009 Zarakhovich Yuri 17 May 2007 Putin s Reunited Russian Church Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 24 December 2020 Russian patriarch calls Putin era miracle of God Reuters 8 February 2012 Pyat veshej kotoryh ne bylo u patriarha Kirilla a b c d Walker Shaun 5 April 2012 Plight of punk rockers turns Russians against the Church The Independent London Retrieved 6 April 2012 Elder Miriam 17 August 2012 Pussy Riot sentenced to two years in prison colony for hooliganism Music theguardian com Retrieved on 1 November 2013 Open letter of Fr Sergy Ribko to Sir Paul McCartney A Russian Orthodox Church Website www pravmir com Retrieved 7 January 2019 a b Sewell Dennis Pussy Riot Were Wrong The Spectator Retrieved 4 June 2022 a b Weaver Courtney 22 August 2012 Pussy I prefer their old stuff Financial Times Retrieved 7 June 2022 Macnab Geoffrey 16 May 2013 Pussy Riot Putin bashing punk rock and politics make for a riotous mix The Independent Retrieved 4 June 2022 Slideshow Russia Remains Divided on The Pussy Riot Case Public Radio International Retrieved 7 January 2019 Kishkovsky Sophia 20 March 2012 Punk Riffs Take on God and Putin The New York Times Retrieved 3 June 2022 Ballerina Says Pussy Riot Should Clean Toilets By Julia Karlysheva for The Moscow Times Retrieved on 10 November 2016 Pussy Riot www israelshamir net Retrieved 7 January 2019 Pussy Riot closing statements translated into English n 1 magazine accessed 19 August 2012 Alessandro Speciale 17 October 2012 Pope backs Orthodox Church against Pussy Riot desecration La Stampa Archived from the original on 3 February 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2015 Unorthodox behaviour rattles Russian church Financial Times 14 April 2012 paper edition a b The strange case of the Patriarch some sand and 20 million rouble lawsuit Siberianlight net 19 April 2012 Ex Minister Made to Pay Over Toxic Dust Moscow Times 9 April 2012 Syn hirurga Shevchenko rasskazal o konflikte vokrug kvartiry patriarha Tvrain ru 27 March 2012 Retrieved on 1 November 2013 Piatakov Sergei 6 April 2012 Former Minister Pays For Dusting Patriarch s Flat RIA Novosti Patriarh Kirill prokommentiroval sud za sosedskuyu kvartiru prostit obidchika bylo by nekorrektno NEWSru 30 March 2012 Schwirtz Michael 5 April 2012 In Russia a Watch Vanishes Up Kirill s Sleeve The New York Times Retrieved 21 November 2016 Sorting through gifts he had received over the years the patriarch discovered that he did indeed own the Breguet Mr Solovyov said But he insisted that that he had never worn it and said he suspected that any photos of him wearing it had been altered with Photoshop Patriarch Kirill found Breguet watch among his presents but says he never wore it Interfax Religion 30 March 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2016 Chasy Patriarha zapyataya nad i Zapiski byvshego ateista in Russian 30 March 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2016 a b Schwirtz Michael 5 April 2012 30 000 Watch Vanishes Up Church Leader s Sleeve The New York Times Retrieved 9 February 2016 Editors doctored a photograph on the church s Web site of the leader Patriarch Kirill I extending a black sleeve where there once appeared to be a Breguet timepiece worth at least 30 000 The church might have gotten away with the ruse if it had not failed to also erase the watch s reflection which appeared in the photo on the highly glossed table where the patriarch was seated a b Russia s Patriarch Kirill in furore over luxury watch BBC 5 April 2012 Retrieved 6 April 2012 The wristwatch shot seen round Russia World Now Los Angeles Times 6 April 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2016 Walker Shaun 4 April 2012 Plight of punk rockers turns Russians against the Church Retrieved 9 February 2016 The attacks have become more prominent during the pre election and post election period said the Supreme Church Council in a statement yesterday apparently referring to both the performance by Pussy Riot and the scandals This shows their political and also anti Russian motives Patriarch Awarded Shoe Saint Petersburg Times 21 June 2012 V polevom hrame na baze Hmejmim v Sirii proshla rozhdestvenskaya sluzhba www interfax ru Patriarh Kirill podderzhal voennuyu operaciyu Rossii v Sirii Solomon Feliz 30 May 2017 Russia s Highest Religious Authority Just Compared Gay Marriage to Nazi Germany The Times Retrieved 31 May 2017 Stefon Matt 16 November 2022 Kirill I Russian Orthodox patriarch Encyclopedia Britannica Slovo na prezidenta Rumen Radev po povod Nacionalniya praznik na Blgariya Treti mart 3 March 2018 www president bg accessed 23 April 2022 Priehal i naehal patriarh Kirill v Bolgarii Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 5 March 2018 Retrieved 12 November 2022 S pozicij sily zachem Patriarh Kirill bolgar obidel Simeonov Drzhavata ne tryabva da uchastva v upravlenieto a v kontrola na ChEZ 7 March 2018 news bnt bg accessed 23 April 2022 Temida Poseshenieto na ruskiya patrirah Kiril prez 2018 g e politichesko Valeri Simeonov ne e obidil moskovskiya gost AsiaNews it Russian Orthodox against Jehovah s Witnesses www asianews it Retrieved 24 December 2020 Russia Court Bans Jehovah s Witnesses Human Rights Watch 20 April 2017 Retrieved 24 December 2020 Opposition to Jehovah s Witnesses in Russia Legal measures IIRF www iirf eu Retrieved 24 December 2020 Luhn Alec 18 December 2019 We Liked to Sing Now We Can Only Whisper How Russia Is Stepping Up Its Persecution of Jehovah s Witnesses Time Retrieved 24 December 2020 Satter David Putin Runs The Russian State And The Russian Church Too Forbes Retrieved 14 March 2022 Graham Harrison Emma 7 March 2022 Ukraine s pro Russian monasteries draw local suspicion The Guardian Retrieved 14 March 2022 Slovo Svyatejshego Patriarha Kirilla v Nedelyu 6 yu po Pashe posle Liturgii v Hrame Hrista Spasitelya Patriarh Patriarhiya ru Svyatejshij Patriarh Kirill vstretilsya s premer ministrom Grecheskoj Respubliki Aleksisom Ciprasom Videomaterialy Patriarhiya ru https www patriarchia ru db text 4028475 html Archived 1 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine www patriarchia ru bare URL a b CNA Report EU commission proposes sanctions against Patriarch Kirill Catholic News Agency Retrieved 22 May 2022 Horowitz Jason 21 May 2022 The Russian Orthodox Leader at the Core of Putin s Ambitions The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Faludy A Patriarch Kirill escapes EU sanctions thanks to Orban s intervention Church Times published 3 June 2022 accessed 28 June 2022 Lautman Olga 10 January 2023 An Unorthodox Russian Vision of Heaven and Hell Center for European Policy Analysis a b GEDEON JOSEPH TOOSI NAHAL 22 June 2022 The pro Putin preacher the U S won t touch Politico Putin pro aneksiyu Krimu RF bula gotova privesti u bojovu gotovnist atomnu zbroyu DW 15 03 2015 Deutsche Welle Dokument ne najden Interfaks www interfax religion ru Interfaks Religiya Putin nameren privlech patriarha Kirilla k uregulirovaniyu konflikta na Ukraine www interfax religion ru Retrieved 12 November 2022 Obrashenie Svyatejshego Patriarha Kirilla v svyazi s situaciej na Ukraine k Predstoyatelyam Pomestnyh Pravoslavnyh Cerkvej Pravoslavie Ru pravoslavie ru Retrieved 12 November 2022 Spriyali okupaciyi Krimu Ukrayina zaochno suditime Aksonova Poklonsku i Konstantinova prm ua Barer Krymtehnologii a b Svyatejshij Patriarh Kirill prinyal uchastie v golosovanii po popravkam k Konstitucii Rossijskoj Federacii Novosti Patriarhiya ru Videoobrashenie Svyatejshego Patriarha Kirilla k uchastnikam VII Vsemirnogo kongressa rossijskih sootechestvennikov prozhivayushih za rubezhom Patriarh Patriarhiya ru The Orthodox Response to Putin s Invasion Commonweal 27 February 2022 Tebor Celina Russia increases censorship with new law 15 years in jail for calling Ukraine invasion a war USA Today Patriarh Kirilo blagosloviv vijska RF na vijnu proti Ukrayini Yak ce stalos BBC News Ukrayina After supporting Ukraine invasion Russia s Patriarch Kirill criticized worldwide National Catholic Reporter 15 March 2022 Sangal Aditi Vogt Adrienne Wagner Meg Yeung Jessie George Steve Noor Haq Sana Ramsay George Upright Ed Vera Amir Chowdhury Maureen 8 March 2022 Russian Orthodox Church alleges gay pride parades were part of the reason for Ukraine war CNN Retrieved 3 April 2022 Russia s Patriarch Kirill defends invasion of Ukraine stoking Orthodox tensions National Catholic Reporter 8 March 2022 Patriarshaya propoved v Nedelyu syropustnuyu posle Liturgii v Hrame Hrista Spasitelya Patriarh Patriarhiya ru Patriarshaya propoved v sredu pervoj sedmicy Velikogo posta posle Liturgii Prezhdeosvyashennyh Darov v Hrame Hrista Spasitelya Patriarh Patriarhiya ru https www oikoumene org sites default files 2022 03 Scan 20of 20the 20official 20letter pdf bare URL PDF Response by H H Patriarch Kirill of Moscow to Rev Prof Dr Ioan Sauca Fontana Luciano 5 March 2022 Exclusive Pope Francis I am ready to meet Putin in Moscow Corriere della Sera in Italian Retrieved 22 May 2022 Pozdravlenie Svyatejshego Patriarha Kirilla po sluchayu Dnya vojsk nacionalnoj gvardii Rossii Patriarh Patriarhiya ru Slovo Svyatejshego Patriarha Kirilla v Nedelyu 4 yu Velikogo posta posle Liturgii v glavnom hrame Vooruzhennyh sil RF Patriarh Patriarhiya ru With war in Ukraine Pope Francis years long outreach to Kirill appears to be in ruins 10 March 2022 Hudson Patrick 4 April 2022 Expel Russian Orthodox from WCC says Rowan Williams The Tablet Retrieved 5 April 2022 Russian Orthodox church in Amsterdam announces split with Moscow the Guardian 13 March 2022 Orthodox Church of Lithuania to seek independence from Moscow orthodoxtimes com About 200 priests of the UOC MP demand International Ecclesiastical Tribunal for Kiril Religious Information Service of Ukraine Retrieved 12 April 2022 Pressure on Kirill intensifies 400 priests call for condemnation by world Orthodoxy Orthodox Times 14 April 2022 Interfaks Religiya Patriarh Kirill prizval vospityvat detej na primere segodnyashnih zashitnikov Rossii Patriarch Kirill Understands Ukraine Church Schism The Moscow Times 29 May 2022 Dmytro Horevo 4 January 2023 The Russian Orthodox Church does not recognize the independence of Ukraine or the independence of the UOC Radio Free Europe in Ukrainian Retrieved 6 January 2023 The Charter of the UOC does not contain any provisions that could even hint at the connection with Moscow the Head of the Legal Department Official website of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate 31 December 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2023 The UOC priest protested his inclusion in the ROC Publishing Council Official website of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate in Ukrainian 31 December 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2023 Top Vatican prelate calls Russian patriarch s defense of Ukraine war heresy Brugen Isabel van 23 September 2022 Putin s top priest tells Russians not to fear death amid mobilization Newsweek Retrieved 24 September 2022 AsiaNews it Russia s Last Crusade www asianews it Retrieved 24 September 2022 Kirill de Moscu sigue llamando a la guerra santa Este sacrificio lava todos los pecados Kirill of Moscow continues to call for holy war This sacrifice washes away all sins El Debate in Spanish 23 September 2022 Retrieved 24 September 2022 Russia s Patriarch Kirill Calls for Orthodox Christmas Ceasefire in Ukraine www kyivpost com 5 January 2023 Retrieved 5 January 2023 A Declaration on the Russian World Russkii mir Teaching Public Orthodoxy 13 March 2022 Retrieved 14 January 2023 2022 A Declaration on the Russian World Teaching Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe Vol 42 Iss 4 Article 11 Putin Runs The Russian State And The Russian Church Too Forbes Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b New Proekt investigation uncovers millions of dollars in real estate belonging to Patriarch Kirill and his family members Meduza Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b Russia s Patriarch Kirill in furore over luxury watch BBC News 5 April 2012 Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b Schwirtz Michael 6 April 2012 30 000 Watch Vanishes Up Church Leader s Sleeve The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 25 April 2022 Russian Orthodox delegation led by Metropolitan Kirill visit Chinnai and Kerala India Russian Orthodox Church 11 December 2006 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Predsednik Vuchiћ uruchio odlikovaњa povodom Dana drzhavnosti Republike Srbiјe Predsednik Republike Srbiјe Retrieved 24 February 2021 External links Media related to Patriarch Kirill I at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Patriarch Kirill of Moscow at Wikiquote Official web site Slovo Patriarcha The Patriarch s Speech in Russian Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad Patriarch Kirill in the social network VKontakte official profile Eastern Orthodox Church titlesPreceded byAlexy II Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia2009 present IncumbentPreceded byTheodosius Protsyuk Metropolitan Bishop of Smolensk1984 2009 Succeeded byTheophylact Kuryanov Portals Biography Christianity Russia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patriarch Kirill of Moscow amp oldid 1138883513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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