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Polish Orthodox Church

The Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church (Polish: Polski Autokefaliczny Kościół Prawosławny), commonly known as the Polish Orthodox Church, or Orthodox Church of Poland, is one of the autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches in full communion. The church was established in 1924, to accommodate Orthodox Christians of Polish descent in the eastern part of the country, when Poland regained its independence after the First World War.

Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church
Polski Autokefaliczny Kościół Prawosławny
Coat of arms
ClassificationEastern Orthodox
PrimateArchbishop of Warsaw and Metropolitan of All Poland, Sawa Hrycuniak.
Bishops12
Dioceses8
Deaneries28
Parishes278
LanguagePolish
Church Slavonic
Portuguese
HeadquartersWarsaw, Poland
TerritoryPoland and Brazil
FounderSs. Cyril and Methodius
Independence1924, 1948
RecognitionAutocephaly recognised in 1924 by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, and in 1948 by the Russian Orthodox Church.
Members504,400 (2016)[1]
Official websitewww.orthodox.pl

In total, it has approximately 500,000 adherents (2016).[1] In the Polish census of 2011, 156,000 citizens declared themselves as members.[2]

History edit

Early period of Russian Orthodoxy: 1793-1905 edit

Following partitions of Poland and annexation of Polish territory by the Imperial Russia, the administration of Eastern Orthodox communities was carried out by the vicar bishop of Pereyaslav and Boryspil of the Kyiv Eparchy with residence in Slutsk.[3] The Eastern Orthodox population on territory of modern Poland was very scarce at that time.[3] In 1825 the administration was switched to the bishop of Minsk and in 1827 - the bishop of Volhynia.[3]

In 1834 there was established a post of the vicar bishop of Warsaw of the Volhynian eparchy.[3] Establishment of the post was partially due to the 1830-31 Polish uprising (so called November Uprising).[3] The idea to create the post of the vicar bishop of Warsaw belonged to the Namiestnik of Poland and Serence Prince of Warsaw Ivan Paskevich.[3] By 1834 in Vistula Land existed at least 6 parochial Orthodox temples and the Saint Onuphrius Monastery in Jabłeczna.[3] The first bishop became Antoni (Rafalski) who was an archimandrite of the Pochaiv Lavra.[3] The new vicar bishop was not only subordinated to the Volhynian eparchy, but also directly to the ober-procurator of the Holy Synod.[3]

Starting since 1783, on territories that were annexed in 1793, there were established Minsk Eparchy, Bratslav Eparchy, and Izyaslav Eparchy.[4] In 1939 there was established the eparchy of Wilno and Lithuania following the 1939 Polotsk Assembly which liquidated Uniate Church on territory of the Imperial Russia.[5] In 1840, the former Warsaw vicariate was transformed into a separate eparchy of Warsaw covering the whole Congress of Poland.[6]

Following the 1875 conversion of Chełm Eparchy (Eparchy of Chełm–Belz) of the Ruthenian Uniate Church, the Eparchy of Warsaw was renamed as Eparchy of Warsaw and Chełm, while Marcel Popiel who played a key role in the process was ordained as a vicar bishop of the merged diocese.

Transitional period: 1905-1924 edit

Following the 1905 revolution in the Imperial Russia, Tsar issued the manifest “On strengthening the principles of religious tolerance” which gave start to revival of Catholicism.[6] Several parishes en masse were switching back to the Uniate Church.[6]

With start of the World War I, in 1915 the Russian Church in Poland was evacuated along with the Russian administration.[6] On territory of what it was "Warsaw Eparchy" remained about 10 priests.[6] The last archbishop of Warsaw Nicholas (Ziorov) died soon after evacuation and during the remaining time of World War I, the diocese was vacant.[6]

Following the 1917–18 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow finally appointed a new bishop to the eparchy of Warsaw whom was Seraphim (Chichagov). Seraphim (Chichagov) was never able to actually arrive to his appointed diocese due to unstable situation. To fix that in September of 1921, the Archbishop of Minsk George (Yaroshevsky) was appointed as Patriarchal Exarch in Poland.[6]

First period of the autocephalous church: 1924-1939 edit

 
Cathedral of St. Mary Magdalene, Warsaw, the main Polish Orthodox Church
 
Supraśl Orthodox Monastery in Supraśl founded by Aleksander Chodkiewicz
 
Meeting of the Holy Synod of the Polish Orthodox Church in 1929 (starting from left bishop Aleksiy, archbishop Theodosius, metropolitan Dionysius, bishop Alexander)

The church was established in 1924 after Poland regained independence, as the Second Polish Republic, following World War I in 1918. After the Polish–Soviet War and the Treaty of Riga of 1921, Poland secured control of a sizeable portion of its former eastern territories previously lost in the late-18th-century Partitions of Poland to the Russian Empire. Eastern Orthodoxy was widespread in the eastern provinces of interwar Poland. The loss of an ecclesiastical link, due to the persecution of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Soviet Union, left the regional clergy in a crisis, and in 1924 the Ecumenical Patriarchate took over, establishing several autonomous churches on territories of the new states that were formerly wholly or partially part of the Russian Empire: Finland, the Baltic states, and Poland.[7] In 1922 a conflict ensued due intervention of the Russian Orthodox Church that approved appointment of bishops in Poland without agreement from Metropolitan of Warsaw George (Yaroshevsky).[8] The conflict was led by the Bishop of Wilno and Lida Eleftherios.[8] Several diocesan bishops along with Eleftherios of Wilno including Panteleimon (Rozhnovsky), Vladimir (Tikhonitsky) and others took stance against seeking autocephalous status for the Orthodox Church in Poland. Most of them were expelled from Poland. Bishops Eleftherios and Vladimir were also against ordination of Alexander (Inozemtsev) who was ordained as a vicar bishop of Lublin by George (Yaroshevsky) and Dionizy (Waledyński) on 4 June 1922.[9]

Earlier, in January 1922, the Polish government had issued an order recognizing the Orthodox church and placing it under the authority of the state. At that time a Ukrainian, George (Yaroshevsky), was appointed Metropolitan and exarch by the patriarch of Moscow. When Yaroshevsky began to reject the authority of Moscow Patriarchate, he was assassinated by a Russian monk.[10] Nonetheless, his successor, Dionizy (Waledyński), continued to work for the autocephaly of the Polish Orthodox church, which was finally granted by the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople in his Tomos of 13 November 1924.[11] Most of the parishioners were Ukrainians and Belarusians living in the eastern areas of the newly independent Polish Second Republic. The Patriarch of Constantinople has the only canonical basis to grant the Tomos to new autocephalous churches. Moscow Patriarchate interpretes this otherwise though and considers itself being a successor of the Kyiv Metropolia, the former territory of Kyivan Rus' which Constantinople continued to see as its canonical territory (having agreed to allow Moscow to be its caretaker in 1686).[12] The Russian Orthodox Church at the time did not recognise Constantinople's granting of Polish autocephaly. See History of Christianity in Ukraine#Territories gained by Pereyaslav Rada.

During the interwar period, however, the Polish authorities imposed severe restrictions on the church and its clergy. In the most famous example, the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Warsaw was destroyed in the mid-1920s. In Volhynia a total of 190 Eastern Orthodox churches were destroyed and a further 150 converted to Catholicism.[13] Several court hearings against the Pochaiv Lavra also took place.[14]

World War II: 1939-1944 edit

Following the start of the World War II on 1 September 1939 and the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939, Poland was divided between the Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. For support of resistance against the Nazi Germany, the Metropolitan Dionisius was arrested, while the Church territories (dioceses) were mostly taken over by the Moscow Patriarchate and the rest were transferred under temporary administration by the Metropolitan of Berlin Seraphim (Lade) of the ROCOR, who also was assisted by Vasily (Pavlovsky).[15] At the end of 1940, Metropolitan Dionisius signed a loyalty declaration for the General Governor of Poland Hans Frank and was released from his arrest.[15] On 30 September 1940 the Bishop Council of the Polish Orthodox Church led by Metropolitan Dionisius reformed the Church considering the new realities and constituted new dioceses which were 3: Diocese of Warschau and Radom, Diocese of Cholm and Podlachia, Diocese of Krakau and Lemkos.[15] On territories that became part of the Reichskommissariat Ukraine, there was established separate "Orthodox Autocephalous Church on liberated territory of Ukraine" under auspices of the Polish Orthodox Church led by Polycarp (Sikorsky), a vicar bishop of Lutsk. Along with Alexander (Inozemtsev), Polycarp (Sikorsky) started to develop what later would be known as the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church.

Another member of the Polish Orthodox Church clergy, Archbishop Alexiy (Hromadsky) in Pochaiv Lavra created in August of 1941 an opposition organization, loyal to the Moscow Patriarchate, known as Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church.

Since 1945 edit

After the Second World War, the pre-war eastern territories of Poland were annexed by the Soviet Union and included within the Lithuanian, Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs. The annexed territories contained up to 80% of the PAOC's parishes and congregation, which were united with the recently re-instated Moscow Patriarchate. The remaining parishes that were now on the territory of the Polish People's Republic were kept by the PAOC, including most of the mixed easternmost territories such as around Chełm and Białystok. In 1948, after the Soviet Union established political control over Poland, the Russian Orthodox Church recognised the autocephalous status of the Polish Orthodox Church.[10][16]

Although most of the congregation is historically centered in the Eastern borderland regions with considerable Belarusian and Ukrainian minorities, there are now many parishes across the country, as a result of Operation Vistula and other diaspora movements. There are also some adherents in Brazil, resulting from the 1989 canonical union between the hierarchy headed by Metropolitan Gabriel of Lisbon, formerly under the Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians of Greece, and the Polish Orthodox Church.[17] The European bishops, however, have left the jurisdiction in 2000, which eventually resulted in senior Bishop Chrysostom being raised to archepiscopal dignity. There are now parishes in the states of Rio de Janeiro, Pernambuco and Paraíba, plus a mission in Ceará[18] and a monastery in João Pessoa.[17][19]

In 2003, following the decision of the Holy Sobor of Bishops of the Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church, the New Martyrs of Chelm and Podlasie suffering persecution during the 1940s were canonized.[20]

Primates of the Church edit

The Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church was established in 1924. Traditionally the primate of the church has the title Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland.

  • Metropolitan George (Grzegorz Jaroszewski) – Metropolitan of Warsaw (1921–1923), Russian Patriarchal Exarch in Poland (Predecessor for establishment of the structure of Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church)
  • Metropolitan Dionysius (Konstanty Waledyński) – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1923–1948)
  • Metropolitan Macarius (Michał Oksijuk) – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1951–1959)
  • Metropolitan Timotheus [pl] (Jerzy Szretter) – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1961–1962)
  • Metropolitan Stefan [pl] – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1965–1969)
  • Metropolitan Basil [pl] (Włodzimierz Doroszkiewicz) – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1970–1998)
  • Metropolitan Sabbas (Michał Hrycuniak) – Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland (1998–present)

Administration edit

Polish Orthodox Cathedrals (examples)
 
Transfiguration Cathedral, Lublin
 
Nativity of Mary Cathedral, Wrocław

The church is headed by the Archbishop of Warsaw and Metropolitan of All Poland: Sawa (Michał) Hrycuniak (1998–). It is divided into the following dioceses:[22]

Archdioceses and archbishops edit

Titular dioceses and bishops edit

  • Titular Diocese of Supraśl: Gregory (Charkiewicz) (2008–), Vicar Bishop for Białystok and Gdańsk[23]
  • Titular Diocese of Siemiatycze: George (Mariusz) Pańkowski (2007–), Ordinary for the Polish Orthodox Military Ordinariate and Vicar Bishop for Warsaw and Bielsk

Other entities edit

  • Polish Orthodox Military Ordinariate

Original dioceses edit

 
Dioceses of the Church before the World War II


Dioceses and bishops upon the issue of the tomos in 1924

Following the Soviet invasion of Poland, most of dioceses except for Warsaw were annexed by the Moscow Patriarchate as so called Western Exarchate centered in Lutsk. Dionizy (Waledyński) was arrested by the Nazi authorities and was placed under arrest.[15] The rest of territories were given to administration of Seraphim (Lade) of the ROCOR, who also was assisted by Vasily (Pavlovsky).[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Główny Urząd Statystyczny, Mały Rocznik Statystyczny Polski 2016, Warszawa 2017, tab. 18(80), s. 115.
  2. ^ Paweł Ciecieląg, Andrzej Datko, Bożena Łazowska, Piotr Łysoń, Paweł Milcarek, Wojciech Sadłoń: 1050 lat chrześcijaństwa w Polsce. Warszawa: GUS, 2016, s. 73. ISBN 978-83-7027-606-5.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i ВАРШАВСКОЕ ВИКАРИАТСТВО. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia)
  4. ^ МИНСКАЯ И ЗАСЛАВСКАЯ ЕПАРХИЯ. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia)
  5. ^ ВИЛЕНСКАЯ И ЛИТОВСКАЯ ЕПАРХИЯ. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g ВАРШАВСКАЯ ЕПАРХИЯ. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia)
  7. ^ M. Papierzyńska-Turek, Między tradycją a rzeczywistością. Państwo wobec prawosławia 1918–1939.
  8. ^ a b ЕЛЕВФЕРИЙ. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia).
  9. ^ Mironowicz A. Kościół prawosławny na ziemiach polskich w XIX i XX wieku, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku, Białystok 2005, ISBN 8374310464.
  10. ^ a b Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine, Polish Autocephalous Orthodox church, accessed 2 June 2020.
  11. ^ "Tomos". Orthodox Church of America - UAOC - Standing Episcopal Conference of Orthodox Bishops. Retrieved 2018-12-22.
  12. ^ "Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew: "As the Mother Church, it is reasonable to desire the restoration of unity for the divided ecclesiastical body in Ukraine" - News Releases - The Ecumenical Patriarchate". www.patriarchate.org. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  13. ^ Healy, R. and Dal Lago, E. The Shadow of Colonialism on Europe’s Modern Past.
  14. ^ (in Ukrainian) ІСТОРИЧНА ВОЛИНЬ: Спроби ревіндикації луцького Свято-Троїцького собору
  15. ^ a b c d e ДИОНИСИЙ. www.pravenc.ru (Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia).
  16. ^ Russian Orthodox Church Department for External Church Relations (14 September 2018). "Statement of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church concerning the uncanonical intervention of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in the canonical territory of the Russian Orthodox Church". Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  17. ^ a b (in Portuguese) Eparquia Ortodoxa do Brasil
  18. ^ "Saint John the Precursor Orthodox Church · CE-040, 39 - Patacas, Aquiraz - CE, 61700-000, Brazil".
  19. ^ (in Portuguese) Mosteiro Ortodoxo da Dormição da Santa Mãe de Deus
  20. ^ J. Charkiewicz, Męczennicy XX wieku. Martyrologia Prawosławia w Polsce w biografiach świętych.
  21. ^ Mironowicz, A. (2001). Kościół prawosławny na ziemiach polskich w XIX i XX wieku. Białystok: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku. p. 248. ISBN 83-7431-046-4.
  22. ^ (in Polish) Polish Orthodox Church: Adminstracja
  23. ^ (in Polish) Orthodox Diocese of Białystok and Gdańsk: Abp Jakub i Bp Grzegorz
  24. ^ . www.ortho-rus.ru (Russian Orthodoxy, archived).

External links edit

  • Polish Orthodox Church, official site
  • Polish Orthodox Church Unofficial Site (English)
  • Polish Orthodox Diocese of Przemyśl-Nowy Sącz (Polish)
  • Polish Orthodox Diocese of Lublin-Chełm (Polish)
  • Polish Orthodox Diocese of Białystok-Gdańsk (English)
  • Polish Orthodox Diocese of Wrocław-Szczecin (Polish)
  • (Polish)
  • (Portuguese)
  • Article by Ronald Roberson on the Polish Orthodox Church on CNEWA website

polish, orthodox, church, polish, autocephalous, orthodox, church, polish, polski, autokefaliczny, kościół, prawosławny, commonly, known, orthodox, church, poland, autocephalous, eastern, orthodox, churches, full, communion, church, established, 1924, accommod. The Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church Polish Polski Autokefaliczny Kosciol Prawoslawny commonly known as the Polish Orthodox Church or Orthodox Church of Poland is one of the autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches in full communion The church was established in 1924 to accommodate Orthodox Christians of Polish descent in the eastern part of the country when Poland regained its independence after the First World War Polish Autocephalous Orthodox ChurchPolski Autokefaliczny Kosciol PrawoslawnyCoat of armsClassificationEastern OrthodoxPrimateArchbishop of Warsaw and Metropolitan of All Poland Sawa Hrycuniak Bishops12Dioceses8Deaneries28Parishes278LanguagePolish Church Slavonic PortugueseHeadquartersWarsaw PolandTerritoryPoland and BrazilFounderSs Cyril and MethodiusIndependence1924 1948RecognitionAutocephaly recognised in 1924 by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and in 1948 by the Russian Orthodox Church Members504 400 2016 1 Official websitewww wbr orthodox wbr pl In total it has approximately 500 000 adherents 2016 1 In the Polish census of 2011 156 000 citizens declared themselves as members 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early period of Russian Orthodoxy 1793 1905 1 2 Transitional period 1905 1924 1 3 First period of the autocephalous church 1924 1939 1 4 World War II 1939 1944 1 5 Since 1945 2 Primates of the Church 3 Administration 3 1 Archdioceses and archbishops 3 2 Titular dioceses and bishops 3 3 Other entities 3 4 Original dioceses 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editEarly period of Russian Orthodoxy 1793 1905 edit See also Russification of Poles during the Partitions and Russification of Belarus Following partitions of Poland and annexation of Polish territory by the Imperial Russia the administration of Eastern Orthodox communities was carried out by the vicar bishop of Pereyaslav and Boryspil of the Kyiv Eparchy with residence in Slutsk 3 The Eastern Orthodox population on territory of modern Poland was very scarce at that time 3 In 1825 the administration was switched to the bishop of Minsk and in 1827 the bishop of Volhynia 3 In 1834 there was established a post of the vicar bishop of Warsaw of the Volhynian eparchy 3 Establishment of the post was partially due to the 1830 31 Polish uprising so called November Uprising 3 The idea to create the post of the vicar bishop of Warsaw belonged to the Namiestnik of Poland and Serence Prince of Warsaw Ivan Paskevich 3 By 1834 in Vistula Land existed at least 6 parochial Orthodox temples and the Saint Onuphrius Monastery in Jableczna 3 The first bishop became Antoni Rafalski who was an archimandrite of the Pochaiv Lavra 3 The new vicar bishop was not only subordinated to the Volhynian eparchy but also directly to the ober procurator of the Holy Synod 3 Starting since 1783 on territories that were annexed in 1793 there were established Minsk Eparchy Bratslav Eparchy and Izyaslav Eparchy 4 In 1939 there was established the eparchy of Wilno and Lithuania following the 1939 Polotsk Assembly which liquidated Uniate Church on territory of the Imperial Russia 5 In 1840 the former Warsaw vicariate was transformed into a separate eparchy of Warsaw covering the whole Congress of Poland 6 Following the 1875 conversion of Chelm Eparchy Eparchy of Chelm Belz of the Ruthenian Uniate Church the Eparchy of Warsaw was renamed as Eparchy of Warsaw and Chelm while Marcel Popiel who played a key role in the process was ordained as a vicar bishop of the merged diocese Transitional period 1905 1924 edit Following the 1905 revolution in the Imperial Russia Tsar issued the manifest On strengthening the principles of religious tolerance which gave start to revival of Catholicism 6 Several parishes en masse were switching back to the Uniate Church 6 With start of the World War I in 1915 the Russian Church in Poland was evacuated along with the Russian administration 6 On territory of what it was Warsaw Eparchy remained about 10 priests 6 The last archbishop of Warsaw Nicholas Ziorov died soon after evacuation and during the remaining time of World War I the diocese was vacant 6 Following the 1917 18 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow finally appointed a new bishop to the eparchy of Warsaw whom was Seraphim Chichagov Seraphim Chichagov was never able to actually arrive to his appointed diocese due to unstable situation To fix that in September of 1921 the Archbishop of Minsk George Yaroshevsky was appointed as Patriarchal Exarch in Poland 6 First period of the autocephalous church 1924 1939 edit nbsp Cathedral of St Mary Magdalene Warsaw the main Polish Orthodox Church nbsp Suprasl Orthodox Monastery in Suprasl founded by Aleksander Chodkiewicz nbsp Meeting of the Holy Synod of the Polish Orthodox Church in 1929 starting from left bishop Aleksiy archbishop Theodosius metropolitan Dionysius bishop Alexander The church was established in 1924 after Poland regained independence as the Second Polish Republic following World War I in 1918 After the Polish Soviet War and the Treaty of Riga of 1921 Poland secured control of a sizeable portion of its former eastern territories previously lost in the late 18th century Partitions of Poland to the Russian Empire Eastern Orthodoxy was widespread in the eastern provinces of interwar Poland The loss of an ecclesiastical link due to the persecution of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Soviet Union left the regional clergy in a crisis and in 1924 the Ecumenical Patriarchate took over establishing several autonomous churches on territories of the new states that were formerly wholly or partially part of the Russian Empire Finland the Baltic states and Poland 7 In 1922 a conflict ensued due intervention of the Russian Orthodox Church that approved appointment of bishops in Poland without agreement from Metropolitan of Warsaw George Yaroshevsky 8 The conflict was led by the Bishop of Wilno and Lida Eleftherios 8 Several diocesan bishops along with Eleftherios of Wilno including Panteleimon Rozhnovsky Vladimir Tikhonitsky and others took stance against seeking autocephalous status for the Orthodox Church in Poland Most of them were expelled from Poland Bishops Eleftherios and Vladimir were also against ordination of Alexander Inozemtsev who was ordained as a vicar bishop of Lublin by George Yaroshevsky and Dionizy Waledynski on 4 June 1922 9 Earlier in January 1922 the Polish government had issued an order recognizing the Orthodox church and placing it under the authority of the state At that time a Ukrainian George Yaroshevsky was appointed Metropolitan and exarch by the patriarch of Moscow When Yaroshevsky began to reject the authority of Moscow Patriarchate he was assassinated by a Russian monk 10 Nonetheless his successor Dionizy Waledynski continued to work for the autocephaly of the Polish Orthodox church which was finally granted by the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople in his Tomos of 13 November 1924 11 Most of the parishioners were Ukrainians and Belarusians living in the eastern areas of the newly independent Polish Second Republic The Patriarch of Constantinople has the only canonical basis to grant the Tomos to new autocephalous churches Moscow Patriarchate interpretes this otherwise though and considers itself being a successor of the Kyiv Metropolia the former territory of Kyivan Rus which Constantinople continued to see as its canonical territory having agreed to allow Moscow to be its caretaker in 1686 12 The Russian Orthodox Church at the time did not recognise Constantinople s granting of Polish autocephaly See History of Christianity in Ukraine Territories gained by Pereyaslav Rada During the interwar period however the Polish authorities imposed severe restrictions on the church and its clergy In the most famous example the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Warsaw was destroyed in the mid 1920s In Volhynia a total of 190 Eastern Orthodox churches were destroyed and a further 150 converted to Catholicism 13 Several court hearings against the Pochaiv Lavra also took place 14 World War II 1939 1944 edit Following the start of the World War II on 1 September 1939 and the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939 Poland was divided between the Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union For support of resistance against the Nazi Germany the Metropolitan Dionisius was arrested while the Church territories dioceses were mostly taken over by the Moscow Patriarchate and the rest were transferred under temporary administration by the Metropolitan of Berlin Seraphim Lade of the ROCOR who also was assisted by Vasily Pavlovsky 15 At the end of 1940 Metropolitan Dionisius signed a loyalty declaration for the General Governor of Poland Hans Frank and was released from his arrest 15 On 30 September 1940 the Bishop Council of the Polish Orthodox Church led by Metropolitan Dionisius reformed the Church considering the new realities and constituted new dioceses which were 3 Diocese of Warschau and Radom Diocese of Cholm and Podlachia Diocese of Krakau and Lemkos 15 On territories that became part of the Reichskommissariat Ukraine there was established separate Orthodox Autocephalous Church on liberated territory of Ukraine under auspices of the Polish Orthodox Church led by Polycarp Sikorsky a vicar bishop of Lutsk Along with Alexander Inozemtsev Polycarp Sikorsky started to develop what later would be known as the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church Another member of the Polish Orthodox Church clergy Archbishop Alexiy Hromadsky in Pochaiv Lavra created in August of 1941 an opposition organization loyal to the Moscow Patriarchate known as Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church Since 1945 edit Further information Polish anti religious campaign 1945 1990 After the Second World War the pre war eastern territories of Poland were annexed by the Soviet Union and included within the Lithuanian Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs The annexed territories contained up to 80 of the PAOC s parishes and congregation which were united with the recently re instated Moscow Patriarchate The remaining parishes that were now on the territory of the Polish People s Republic were kept by the PAOC including most of the mixed easternmost territories such as around Chelm and Bialystok In 1948 after the Soviet Union established political control over Poland the Russian Orthodox Church recognised the autocephalous status of the Polish Orthodox Church 10 16 Although most of the congregation is historically centered in the Eastern borderland regions with considerable Belarusian and Ukrainian minorities there are now many parishes across the country as a result of Operation Vistula and other diaspora movements There are also some adherents in Brazil resulting from the 1989 canonical union between the hierarchy headed by Metropolitan Gabriel of Lisbon formerly under the Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians of Greece and the Polish Orthodox Church 17 The European bishops however have left the jurisdiction in 2000 which eventually resulted in senior Bishop Chrysostom being raised to archepiscopal dignity There are now parishes in the states of Rio de Janeiro Pernambuco and Paraiba plus a mission in Ceara 18 and a monastery in Joao Pessoa 17 19 In 2003 following the decision of the Holy Sobor of Bishops of the Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church the New Martyrs of Chelm and Podlasie suffering persecution during the 1940s were canonized 20 Primates of the Church editThe Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church was established in 1924 Traditionally the primate of the church has the title Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland Metropolitan George Grzegorz Jaroszewski Metropolitan of Warsaw 1921 1923 Russian Patriarchal Exarch in Poland Predecessor for establishment of the structure of Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church Metropolitan Dionysius Konstanty Waledynski Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1923 1948 locum tenens Timothy Szretter 1948 1951 21 Metropolitan Macarius Michal Oksijuk Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1951 1959 Metropolitan Timotheus pl Jerzy Szretter Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1961 1962 locum tenens George Korenistov 1962 1965 Metropolitan Stefan pl Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1965 1969 locum tenens George Korenistov 1969 1970 Metropolitan Basil pl Wlodzimierz Doroszkiewicz Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1970 1998 Metropolitan Sabbas Michal Hrycuniak Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland 1998 present Administration editPolish Orthodox Cathedrals examples nbsp Alexander Nevsky Cathedral Lodz nbsp Saint Nicholas Cathedral Bialystok nbsp Transfiguration Cathedral Lublin nbsp Nativity of Mary Cathedral Wroclaw The church is headed by the Archbishop of Warsaw and Metropolitan of All Poland Sawa Michal Hrycuniak 1998 It is divided into the following dioceses 22 Archdioceses and archbishops edit Archdiocese of Warsaw and Bielsk Sawa Hrycuniak Archdiocese of Bialystok and Gdansk Jakub Kostiuczuk 2008 Archdiocese of Lodz and Poznan Atanazy Nos 2017 Archdiocese of Wroclaw and Szczecin George Pankowski 2017 Archdiocese of Lublin and Chelm Abel Poplawski 2001 Archdiocese of Przemysl and Gorlice Paisius Martyniuk 2016 Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro and Olinda Recife Chrysostom Freire 1992 Diocese of Recife Ambrose Cubas 1996 Titular dioceses and bishops edit Titular Diocese of Suprasl Gregory Charkiewicz 2008 Vicar Bishop for Bialystok and Gdansk 23 Titular Diocese of Siemiatycze George Mariusz Pankowski 2007 Ordinary for the Polish Orthodox Military Ordinariate and Vicar Bishop for Warsaw and Bielsk Other entities edit Polish Orthodox Military Ordinariate Original dioceses edit nbsp Dioceses of the Church before the World War IIDioceses and bishops upon the issue of the tomos in 1924Diocese of Warsaw and Chelm ruling Dionizy Waledynski vicar of Lublin Alexander Inozemtsev Diocese of Wolyn Dionizy Waledynski Diocese of Grodno and Nowogrodek Aleksiy Hromadsky Diocese of Pinsk and Polesie Diocese of Wilna and Lida Theodosius Feodosiev 24 Following the Soviet invasion of Poland most of dioceses except for Warsaw were annexed by the Moscow Patriarchate as so called Western Exarchate centered in Lutsk Dionizy Waledynski was arrested by the Nazi authorities and was placed under arrest 15 The rest of territories were given to administration of Seraphim Lade of the ROCOR who also was assisted by Vasily Pavlovsky 15 See also editReligion in Poland Catholic Church in Poland Protestantism in Poland Eastern Orthodox Communion Suprasl Lavra Union of Brest Reformation in Poland Warsaw Icon MuseumReferences edit a b Glowny Urzad Statystyczny Maly Rocznik Statystyczny Polski 2016 Warszawa 2017 tab 18 80 s 115 Pawel Ciecielag Andrzej Datko Bozena Lazowska Piotr Lyson Pawel Milcarek Wojciech Sadlon 1050 lat chrzescijanstwa w Polsce Warszawa GUS 2016 s 73 ISBN 978 83 7027 606 5 a b c d e f g h i VARShAVSKOE VIKARIATSTVO www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia MINSKAYa I ZASLAVSKAYa EPARHIYa www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia VILENSKAYa I LITOVSKAYa EPARHIYa www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia a b c d e f g VARShAVSKAYa EPARHIYa www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia M Papierzynska Turek Miedzy tradycja a rzeczywistoscia Panstwo wobec prawoslawia 1918 1939 a b ELEVFERIJ www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia Mironowicz A Kosciol prawoslawny na ziemiach polskich w XIX i XX wieku Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Bialymstoku Bialystok 2005 ISBN 8374310464 a b Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Polish Autocephalous Orthodox church accessed 2 June 2020 Tomos Orthodox Church of America UAOC Standing Episcopal Conference of Orthodox Bishops Retrieved 2018 12 22 Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew As the Mother Church it is reasonable to desire the restoration of unity for the divided ecclesiastical body in Ukraine News Releases The Ecumenical Patriarchate www patriarchate org Retrieved 2018 10 28 Healy R and Dal Lago E The Shadow of Colonialism on Europe s Modern Past in Ukrainian ISTORIChNA VOLIN Sprobi revindikaciyi luckogo Svyato Troyickogo soboru a b c d e DIONISIJ www pravenc ru Russian Orthodox Encyclopedia Russian Orthodox Church Department for External Church Relations 14 September 2018 Statement of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church concerning the uncanonical intervention of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in the canonical territory of the Russian Orthodox Church Retrieved 17 February 2021 a b in Portuguese Eparquia Ortodoxa do Brasil Saint John the Precursor Orthodox Church CE 040 39 Patacas Aquiraz CE 61700 000 Brazil in Portuguese Mosteiro Ortodoxo da Dormicao da Santa Mae de Deus J Charkiewicz Meczennicy XX wieku Martyrologia Prawoslawia w Polsce w biografiach swietych Mironowicz A 2001 Kosciol prawoslawny na ziemiach polskich w XIX i XX wieku Bialystok Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Bialymstoku p 248 ISBN 83 7431 046 4 in Polish Polish Orthodox Church Adminstracja in Polish Orthodox Diocese of Bialystok and Gdansk Abp Jakub i Bp Grzegorz Feodosij Feodosiev www ortho rus ru Russian Orthodoxy archived External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orthodox churches in Poland Polish Orthodox Church official site Polish Orthodox Church Unofficial Site English Polish Orthodox Diocese of Przemysl Nowy Sacz Polish Polish Orthodox Diocese of Lublin Chelm Polish Polish Orthodox Diocese of Bialystok Gdansk English Polish Orthodox Diocese of Wroclaw Szczecin Polish Polish Orthodox Military Ordinariat Polish Polish Orthodox Diocese of Brazil Portuguese Article by Ronald Roberson on the Polish Orthodox Church on CNEWA website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish Orthodox Church amp oldid 1221413491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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