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Native Ukrainian National Faith

The Native Ukrainian National Faith (Ukrainian: Рі́дна Украї́нська Націона́льна Ві́ра, Rídna Ukrayíns'ka Natsionál'na Víra; widely known by the acronym РУНВі́ра, RUNVira), also called Sylenkoism (Силенкоїзм) or Sylenkianism (Силенкіянство), and institutionally also known as the Church of Ukrainian Native Faith or Church of the Faithful of the Native Ukrainian National Faith,[2][α] is a branch of Rodnovery (Slavic Native Faith) specifically linked to the Ukrainians that was founded in the mid 1960s by Lev Sylenko (1921–2008) among the Ukrainian diaspora in North America,[5] and first introduced in Ukraine in 1991.[6] Sylenkoite communities are also present in Russia and Belarus, as well as in Western Europe and Oceania.[7] The doctrine of this tradition is codified into a sacred book composed by Sylenko himself, the Maha Vira ("Great Faith").[8] Sylenkoite theology is characterised by a solar monotheism.[9]

The symbol of RUNVira, a trysuttia, representing Prav, Yav and Nav, encircled by the Sun, that is the visible Dazhboh.[1]

Overview edit

Lev Sylenko (1921–2008) was a disciple of the earliest ideologue of Ukrainian Rodnovery, Volodymyr Shaian (1908–1974), and was a member of the religio-political anti-Soviet "Order of the Knights of the Sun God" (Orden Lytsariv Boha Sontsia) founded by the same Shaian in the 1940s.[10] Sylenko was initiated into the group with the name Orlyhora ("Eagle Mountain").[11] In the 1940s, Sylenko emigrated to Canada, and then to the United States, where in the 1960s he founded the Native Ukrainian National Faith.[12] By the 1970s, Shaian and Sylenko had parted and taken two different paths, as Sylenko had begun to elaborate a systematised doctrine of Rodnovery which was rejected by Shaian.[10] After travels in Europe and Asia, Sylenko compiled the Maha Vira, the holy book of his doctrine, and published it in 1979.[13] The Maha Vira was preceded in 1969 by the poem The Mage's Gate, in which Sylenko outlined in a nutshell the foundations of the doctrine.[14]

The scholar Adrian Ivakhiv defined Sylenkoism as a "reformed" Rodnovery, a "comprehensive and systematic attempt to create an intellectually coherent synthetic new religion" based on Slavic heritage with elements of Theosophy, deism and messianism.[15] The scholar Victor Shnirelman defined Sylenkoism as a monotheism based on Slavic heritage, and as such he compared it to the later "Russian Religion" developed in Russia by Viktor M. Kandyba.[16] Due to its monotheism and its early emphasis on the charismatic figure of the founder, Sylenkoism has been deemed by other Ukrainian Rodnover movements as a not authentically "native" religion.[17] Members of Sylenkoite churches, however, consider themselves Rodnovers in all respects.[17] Halyna Lozko, the leader of the Federation of Ukrainian Rodnovers, which continues Volodymyr Shaian's orthodoxy, advanced vehement critiques of Sylenkoism, calling Lev Sylenko a "false prophet" and accusing him of having tried to lead the Ukrainians into the Abrahamic religions' "quagmire of cosmopolitan monotheism".[18] Lozko criticised Sylenko for "cancelling the ancestral gods, proclaiming absolute monotheism, and [...] attaching his own characteristics to [...] God".[19] Despite this, Lev Sylenko himself rejected the Abrahamisms, and Christianity in particular, deeming the latter a "nomadic Judaism".[20]

Beliefs edit

Historiosophy of the Maha Vira edit

 
Lev Sylenko holding the Maha Vira, 1979.

The Maha Vira (literally "Great Faith") is the holy writing used within the organisations of the Sylenkoite movement,[21] published in 1979 and consisting in 1,427 pages.[22] Its title blends the Sanskrit term maha, "great", and the Ukrainian term vira, "faith".[23] It was composed by Lev Sylenko himself as a synthesis of philosophical ideas relying upon historical and archaeological sources,[24] presenting a historiosophical account of eleven thousand years, intertwined with theological and cosmological doctrines, and a prophetic message for the future.[25] The book includes a comparative lexicon of Sanskrit, Ukrainian and English language.[24]

The book tells the history of "Oriiana" or "Orania", identified as the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture (3000–5000 BCE), assumed to have been the epicentre of the Indo-Europeans or Aryans, whom the book calls "Oriians", evoking a connection with the Ukrainian word for "plowing", oraty.[24] The progenitors of the Oriians, and therefore of Ukrainians, are Father Or (Орь) and Mother Lel (Лель), who are frequently depicted in RUNVira shrines and temples.[26] Or is also called Orii (Орій) or Arii (Арій), Orya (Оря), and Yari or Yuri, and identified as the solar deity Yarilo, while Lel is also known as Lelii (Лелій) and Lelya (Леля).[27] [28]

According to the book, the Oriians are the original progenitors of the white race, and the earliest European civilisation—corresponding to, or preceding, the Cucuteni-Trypillia complex—developed along the banks of the Dnieper.[24] From the Oriians descended the Scythians, the Russians and the Ukrainians.[24] The Ukrainians are regarded as the most direct descendants of the Oriians, and therefore as superior to all Europeans.[23] Kyiv is described as the "most ancient city" of the white race.[23] The Oriians are described in the book as the carriers of the philosophy later written down in the Vedas, developed as the Oriians migrated in different directions including the north of the Indian subcontinent.[24]

The Maha Vira is described by Ivakhiv as a "systematic intellectual construct" grounded on the premise of Ukrainian ethnocultural primordialism or essentialism.[29] The book explains that during its evolution, the human species has divided itself into many distinct ethnocultural groups, ethne or ethnoi (singular ethnos, the Greek word for "ethnicity"), each of which undergoes its life cycle, flourishing and perishing according to its own development.[29] Sylenko argues that without such division, the human species would be too fragile, as the division allows for a diversity of experiments, some successful and some others not, allowing for a continuation of evolution.[29] The formation of an ethnos is always accompanied by the systematisation of originally unorganised beliefs into a coherent religious doctrine, representing a shared system of ideas unifying the ethnos; the Maha Vira intends to represent such systematisation for the Ukrainians.[29]

Theology and cosmology edit

 
The tryzub or trysuttia as a representation of the theo-cosmology of Ukrainian Sylenkoism.

According to the definition given by Sylenko himself, his doctrine is that of a solar "absolute monotheism".[30] Sylenko proclaimed himself a prophet, bringing to the Slavs a new understanding of God that, according to him, corresponds to their own and original understanding of God.[31] The Sylenkoites believe that he acquired this knowledge through the "breath of his ancestors" in his soul, being united with them "by divine holiness".[31][β] According to Sylenko's own words:[31]

I was born out of their [the ancestors'] love. And this is why I love everything that is my own so devotedly and tenderly as they loved it. Their blood flows in my blood. Their souls live in my soul. They are my love. [...] God's grace came upon me, and following the will of God I have proclaimed a new understanding of God.

— Lev Sylenko, The Wisdom of Ukrainian Truth: A Catechism

Sylenkoite theology may be further defined as pantheistic or panentheistic.[33] In the Maha Vira, the supreme God, identifying himself as Dazhboh (Дажбог)—meaning "Giving God" or "Sun God" in the ancient Slavic tradition[34]—proclaims through his prophet Lev Sylenko:[33]

I am Dazhboh, I am in all things and all things are in me.

Dazhboh is described as the life-giving energy of the cosmos; in Sylenko's own words it is "light, endlessness, gravitation, eternity, movement, action, the energy of unconscious and conscious being".[35] Sylenkoite cosmology conceives Dazhboh as containing the three worlds, Prav, Yav and Nav.[1] As in broader Rodnovery, Prav is considered the right law of nature, Yav is the visible, manifested world, while Nav is the invisible, spiritual world.[1]

Sylenko is seen by his followers as making the same operation that Axial Age thinkers made, in other parts of the world and among other peoples, by moving away from polytheism and affirming the concept of single God.[36][γ] Sylenkoite doctrine emphasises, in evolutionary terms, that monotheism is a higher level of spiritual development than polytheism, and the latter should be rejected, since, by the words of Sylenko's writings: "Dazhboh [...] has no need of any ambassadors in the form of higher or lower deities".[36] Sylenko was profoundly influenced by the discourse about a European superiority communicated through the concept of monotheism, and he envisioned the Ukrainians as the superior people who will extend to all Europeans his operation of spiritual progress, spreading the "European understanding of God", implying a reformulation of local European ethnic polytheistic religions into Sylenkoite monotheism.[37] In Sylenko's own words:[37]

Humanity languishes in the darkness: it is absolutely necessary to feed its brain with new food. Ukraine is called by the Heavens to show Europe the new way [of spiritual development].

— Lev Sylenko, A Guest from the Temple of Ancestors

Despite their monotheism, some Sylenkoites take part in initiatives of non-Sylenkoite Rodnovers involving polytheistic worship,[38] or listen to the music of Zhyvosyl Liutyi dedicated to multiple deities.[39]

Practices edit

Priesthood edit

 
Five Sylenkoite tatos and a mama distinguished by wearing blue and yellow sviadanas.

Sylenkoite communities are led by male and female priests, respectively called RUNtatos ("Native Ukrainian National fathers") and RUNmamas ("Native Ukrainian National mothers").[23] Not all the branches of Sylenkoism use the terms tato and mama to refer to the clergy; notably, OSID RUNVira, a branch of the original RUNVira church that further reworked Sylenko's original teachings, uses simply the term "priests".[1] Male priests significantly outnumber their female counterparts.[23] When Lev Sylenko was alive, until 2008, ordinations were conferred by him himself, as a candidate had to make an application to him supported by letters of recommendation from the same candidate's religious community.[40]

Sylenkoite priests are expected to teach the congregation how to apply the religion's tenets in everyday life, and to give advice to the congregation's members on various matters regarding personal and social life.[41] A good priest is required to show loyalty towards the religious doctrines, and to have some specific personality traits: he should be self-controlled, he should speak softly, and behave in a noble way; he should never judge, accuse or intimidate anybody, and he should never show anger.[41] Priests are distinguished by wearing a sviadana, that is to say a long narrow ribbon made of blue and yellow fabric, with black and red horizontal bands, draped around the neck.[42] Male priests wear embroidered shirts, usually combined with European suits.[43]

Rites and holidays edit

 
Painting representing the tree of life, by the painter Viktor Kryzhanivskyi (1950–2016) very appreciated by Sylenkoites.[44]

The Maha Vira contains descriptions of rituals and holidays, and a calendar which begins its chronology eleven thousand years ago, when the Paleolithic culture of Mezine reached its apogee.[23] Many of the rituals and holidays described in the book are derived from Ukrainian village folklore, interpreted and adjusted by Sylenko himself, while others are newly created.[23] A detailed description of Sylenkoite practices is also given in Sylenko's Sacred Book of Rituals, which was first published in the United States.[41]

The holidays comprise the Great Day of Dazhboh's Light on 14 April, corresponding to the celebration of Easter in Ukrainian villages.[41] Other holidays are dedicated to important figures of Ukrainian history, including Sviatoslav I (935–972), the last traditional religious prince of Kievan Rus' and a great warrior who expanded the borders of his country, and Taras Shevchenko (1814–1861), whom Sylenko regarded as a critic of Christianity and promoter of the ancestral faith.[41] Other Sylenkoite holidays are dedicated to contemporary social and environmental issues, including the Day of Animal Protection on 28 April, and the Day of the People's Anger on 5 November, a day dedicated to indignation towards intruders and oppressors of the Ukrainian nation.[41] 27 September is the Day of the Holy Maha Vira and the birthday of the "Native Prophet", Lev Sylenko.[41]

Sylenkoite lifecycle rituals include the blessing of a newborn child, marriages, funerals, and the commemoration of the dead.[41] Every new convert to the religion is also required to choose a native Slavic name, and goes through a ritual of name-giving or renaming.[45] The latter is especially needed when the convert has a "foreign" given name, and even more so when such name is associated with Christianity.[45] A weekly worship ceremony held on Sunday, called the Holy Hour of Self-Reflection, constitutes the main setting for most rites.[41] Although Sylenko allows some flexibility in the ritual practice, he insists that the Maha Vira should be the main source for their preparation.[1] The priest is supposed to choose lectures from the Maha Vira pertaining to the theme of the weekly Holy Hour; for example, on the Day of Taras Shevchenko the priest reads the passages of the book dedicated to Shevchenko's life and legacy, while on folk holidays the priest reads those passages of the book that describe how a particular holiday was celebrated in the past and how it should be observed today.[1]

Despite Sylenko's efforts to establish a unified liturgy, later leaders and branches of the movement approached his teaching selectively.[1] For instance, OSID RUNVira practises a Service of Honouring God (Nabozhenstvo), elaborated by Bohdan Ostrovskyi, that only vaguely resembles the Holy Hour of Self-Reflection, not containing much reading from the Maha Vira and focusing instead on colourful ritual action and singing.[1] OSID RUNVira also recognises the holiday of Kupala Night as part of the Sylenkoite calendar, and celebrates it through a complex ritual recreated by the same Ostrovskyi.[46] At the 2008 Triennial RUNVira Council held in Bohoyavlensky, Mykolaiv, one of the major issues addressed by the delegates was the growing diversification and inconsistency among the rituals performed by different Sylenkoite congregations across Ukraine, as different leaders were introducing too many innovations in their congregations' liturgy; most of the delegates agreed that standardisation was important and they called for a more strict following of Sylenko's liturgy book.[47]

Like other Rodnovers, especially Cossack sorcerers, many Sylenkoites practise martial arts.[48] The most widely known figure of Ukrainian martial arts in the 2010s is the Sylenkoite follower Volodymyr Pylat, the founder and teacher of Boiovyi Hopak, a martial form of the traditional Cossack dance of hopak combined with a philosophical worldview.[49] Before turning to Slavic martial arts, Pylat was a sensei in Kyokushin Karate and he studied other Eastern martial arts styles.[50] His school is located in Lviv, and his work is appreciated both by Sylenkoites and by other Rodnovers.[48] The basic philosophical tenets of the practice are expressed by Pylat himself in the following terms:[48]

Fighting for truth and against the forces of Darkness and Evil in the name of victory for Light, Goodness and Love — positive creative powers that facilitate the development of the Universe, the creation of the most perfect forms of life and the transformation of the physical into the spiritual.

Temples and altars edit

 
Sylenkoite priests holding a ceremony in a hall in Kyiv. At the centre of the scene there is an altar with the symbol of Dazhboh, a blue and a yellow candle, cups for soil and water, a portrait of Lev Sylenko, and a copy of the Maha Vira.

Sylenkoite ceremonies are usually held inside temples and in front of altars.[51] Two important temples include the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko, located in Bohoyavlensky, Mykolaiv, the village in southern Ukraine where Lev Sylenko was born,[52] and the Temple of Oriiana in Spring Glen, New York, in the United States.[53] Stationary altars are located in temples or in people's homes, as domestic altars.[51] They are set up on a table covered with four different embroidered cloths, of which the top and bottom pieces are decorated with meandering designs associated with the culture of Mezine.[51] In the middle of the altar is located a portable symbol of Dazhboh, a mandatory attribute for all Sylenkoite services.[51] There are also two figurines representing Or and Lel, two candles in candlesticks, a sviadana, flowers, a container for holy soil,[54] and another one for holy water.[55] According to the instructions of Sylenko, ears of wheat should be placed on the altar to symbolise the agricultural origins of the Ukrainians, the holy soil should be from the fields of Trypillia, and the holy water should be from the Dnieper.[55]

The altars of OSID RUNVira, the branch of the movement which further elaborated Sylenko's ideas and does not recognise him as the ultimate prophet but as the main ideologist of the religion, do not display many references to Sylenko himself apart from the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rituals.[56] On the contrary, the altars of OSIDU RUNVira, the branch of the movement which recognises Sylenko as the ultimate prophet, apart from displaying the books, always also display a portrait of Sylenko himself whom is object of worship.[56]

Organisations edit

The early church of the Native Ukrainian National Faith was founded by Lev Sylenko in 1966, in the United States, among the Ukrainian diaspora.[57] The first congregation was established in Chicago, and later congregations were founded in Canada, England, Germany, Australia and New Zealand.[58] The headquarters of the church were set at the Temple of Oriiana, located in Spring Glen, New York, in the region of the Catskill Mountains.[6] The Sylenkoite movement was introduced in Ukraine in the early 1990s.[53] The first congregation was registered by the government in Kyiv in 1991, less than a month after the collapse of the Soviet Union.[53] By the end of the decade the number of registered communities had grown to fifty and other tens were active throughout the country without formal registration.[25] The movement also spread to Russia and Belarus.[14]

During the 1980s, Sylenkoism split into at least four major branches,[59] and many other communities led by several individual tatos, or male spiritual leaders.[60] The contemporary four distinct Sylenkoite churches, which administer more than one hundred congregations spread throughout Ukraine, are: the "Association of Sons and Daughters of the Native Ukrainian National Faith" (OSID RUNVira), the "Association of Sons and Daughters of Ukraine of the Native Ukrainian National Faith" (OSIDU RUNVira), Volodymyr Chornyi's Lviv-based "western branch" of OSIDU RUNVira, and the "Union of Native Ukrainian Faith" (SRUV).[61]

OSIDU RUNVira edit

 
Sylenkoite priest preaching at the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko, of OSIDU RUNVira, located where Sylenko was born, in Bohoyavlensky, Mykolaiv, Ukraine.[52] The background wall paintings representing Or and Lel were made by Viktor Kryzhanivskyi.[62]

Among Sylenkoite organisations, the "Associations of Sons and Daughters of Ukraine of the Native Ukrainian National Faith" (ОСІДУ РУНВіра, OSIDU RUNVira) is that which has maintained direct relationship with Sylenko, fully accepting him as prophet.[53] As of the mid-2000s the leader of the organisation was Bohdan Savchenko.[25] The OSIDU Sylenkoites consider themselves a transformed and completed Rodnovery, focusing on the monotheistic belief in the impersonal Dazhboh, the energy of the cosmos.[33]

Members of OSIDU RUNVira practise a weekly Holy Hour of Self-Reflection, which includes readings from the Maha Vira, sermons, commentaries, ancestor worship, prayers and hymns, and ends with the singing of Ukraine's national anthem.[63] Liturgical elements for the ceremony include the symbol of Dazhboh, a jar with water from a holy river, a box containing soil from a holy ground, two candles, wheat ears, flowers (poppies and cornflowers), a sviadana, copies of the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rituals, and a portrait of Lev Sylenko.[64] OSIDU Sylenkoites are open to the celebration of holidays together with non-Sylenkoite Rodnovers, with traditional folk singing, bonfire jumping, circle and spiral dancing, burning or drowning the effigies of the deities Kupalo and Marena, and meeting the Sun's first rays the next morning.[65] Some OSIDU Sylenkoite congregations also organise projects for the wider public; a community in Kharkiv, for instance, creates rai-sady ("paradise-gardens") and organises a regular festival dedicated to ecology and spirituality.[65]

OSID RUNVira edit

 
Temple of Oriiana, belonging to the OSID RUNVira, in Spring Glen, New York, United States.

The "Association of Sons and Daughters of the Native Ukrainian National Faith" (ОСІД РУНВіра, OSID RUNVira) is the largest among Sylenkoite organisations.[27] While recognising him as the founder of the movement, OSID RUNVira rejected Lev Sylenko's ultimate authority and sought a "more multilateral approach" to Rodnovery, remaining open to further developments independent from Sylenko.[66] OSID RUNVira is currently led by a Holy Council presided by the folk musician Bohdan Ostrovskyi in Kyiv.[67] Ostrovskyi was the founder of the first congregation of Sylenkoites in Ukraine in 1991.[67] OSID RUNVira is the owner of the Temple of Oriiana in Spring Glen which the organisation took over by legal means in the late 1990s, after a dispute over the ownership with OSIDU RUNVira and especially with Lev Sylenko's secretary and confidante Tetiana Lysenko (Svitoslava).[68]

Like OSIDU Sylenkoites, OSID Sylenkoites too celebrate weekly Holy Hours, but the OSID ritual is eclectic in incorporating non-Sylenkoite elements such as readings of the Book of Veles or of Taras Shevchenko's poetry.[67] As an alternative to the Holy Hour, Ostrovskyi has also elaborated a Service of Honouring God (Nabozhenstvo), which puts less focus on the Maha Vira and emphasises ritual action and singing instead.[1] OSID liturgy includes items like the didukh, that is a braided wheat sheaf, and an object representing fire besides water and earth,[67] and besides all the other elements present in the shared Sylenkoite liturgy, like the symbol of Dazhboh, two candles, a sviadana, and copies of the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rites.[54] Ancestor worship is central to OSID Sylenkoism too, especially the celebration of heroes of Ukrainian and Slavic history, including the Oriians' supreme forefather Or and modern Ukrainian heroes, such as Taras Shevchenko, Ivan Franko, Bohdan Khmelnytsky, and Hryhory Skovoroda.[67] However, compared to OSIDU RUNVira, OSID Sylenkoism puts more emphasis on traditional Slavic seasonal holidays in honour of the gods Kupala, Perun, Lada, and Dana.[67] OSID RUNVira also notably uses de-Christianised names for some of its holidays—such as "Christmas of Dazhboh's Light" and "Easter of the Eternal Resurrection".[67]

Union of Native Ukrainian Faith edit

The "Union of Native Ukrainian Faith" (Собор Рідної Української Віри, Sobor Ridnoyi Ukrayins'koyi Viry; SRUV) is another organisation of the Sylenkoite movement, more independent than the others from the original tradition, and more eclectic in its interpretation of the religion.[67] It was founded in 1994 under the leadership of Oleh Bezverkhyi, author of several semi-scholarly pamphlets on Ukrainian Rodnovery and mysticism, raceology and related topics.[69] The headquarters of SRUV Sylenkoism are in Vinnytsia.[67] The SRUV has been more open than the other Sylenkoite organisations to an ecumenical movement of conciliation between Sylenkoites and non-Sylenkoite Rodnovers, taking part in the organisation of some pan-Rodnover viches.[70]

Besides the Maha Vira of Lev Sylenko, SRUV Sylenkoism also relies upon the writings of Shaian, Shkavrytko, Kokriatskyi, Orion, Lisovyi and others.[67] While retaining Sylenkoite monotheism, the SRUV promotes what it considers a more authentically Ukrainian theology with an emphasis on mysticism.[71] SRUV Sylenkoites consider Podolia to be the heart of the ancient Oriian civilisation, being the place where remains of a large Scythian temple and the Zbruch Idol representing Svetovid were found, as well as the place where ancient Slavic religion was defended the longest and most strenuously by the Bolokhivsky princes, ostensibly as late as 1620.[71]

Symbolism edit

Sylenkoite symbolism relies much upon historical and contemporary Ukrainian national symbolism.[1] The main symbol of Sylenkoism features the colours blue and yellow, and includes the tryzub (Ukrainian: тризуб), one of the historical symbols of the Rurikids which is featured on the modern coat of arms of Ukraine.[1] The latter is called trysuttia in Sylenkoism, and is held to represent the three worlds Prav, Yav and Nav.[1] The trident is encircled by a stylised Sun, symbol of Dazhboh.[1] Sylenkoism also draws from the Paleolithic culture of Mezine for inspiration, and one of the most important symbols within the religion is the meander (an ornamental design winding in and out), considered related to Mezine and perceived as the most archaic form of ancestral spiritual expression.[72]

Sociology edit

Demographics edit

 
Communal worship of OSIDU Sylenkoites at the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko in Bohoyavlensky, Mykolaiv.

Writing in 2005, the scholar Adrian Ivakhiv observed that, compared to broader Rodnovery, Sylenkoism tended to attract a more mature segment of society, namely people of around 40 years of age or older, although sometimes younger members took leadership functions.[65] The adherents of the movement overlapped with folk and traditional music revival groups, traditional martial arts groups, with nationalist and ultra-nationalist political groups such as the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence (UNA-UNSO), with other cultural groups such as the National Writers' Union of Ukraine and the Traditional Association of Ukrainian Cossacks, a body founded in 2001 and having members in nineteen Ukrainian provinces.[73] According to the scholar Alexey V. Gaidukov, in the 1990s the Sylenkoite doctrine was studied in university programs, and "the flower of the country's [Ukraine's] intelligentsia", including writers (Serhiy Plachynda, Anatoliy Kachan, Mykola Luhovyk) and artists, joined the church.[14] Volodymyr Pylat, a leader of OSIDU RUNVira, was involved in the rebirth in western Ukraine of a martial art version of the hopak, a traditional Cossack dance.[74]

Despite an original animosity between Sylenkoites and non-Sylenkoite Ukrainian Rodnovers, since the early 2000s there has been an increasing movement of ecumenical cooperation between the two factions.[75] In 2003, forty-one delegates from communities across Ukraine and thirty-eight registered guests gathered in Kyiv at the First Forum of Ukrainian Rodnovers, presided by Iurii Shilov, Oleh Bezverkhyi of SRUV Sylenkoism, and Petro Ruban.[75] A Second Forum of Ukrainian Rodnovers followed ten months later, attended by fifty-one delegates, forty-six participants and twenty-six other guests.[75] SRUV Sylenkoism has been more open than both OSIDU RUNVira and OSID RUNVira to this ecumenical movement of Ukrainian Rodnovery.[70] Many Rodnover groups in contemporary Ukraine rely upon the teachings of both Shaian and Sylenko.[76]

Political ideas edit

The scholar Mariya Lesiv noted that Sylenkoism is "the most politically charged" among Ukrainian Rodnover streams,[77] and that, differently from other Rodnovers who put more emphasis on the shared identity of the Slavic peoples, the Sylenkoites tend to emphasise the unique characteristics of the Ukrainians and especially their distinction from the Russians.[78] Some Sylenkoites consider the Ukrainians to be the true descendants of the early medieval Russes and of Kievan Rus', while the modern Russians to be for the most part Russified Tatars of late medieval Muscovy (Muscovites).[14] The latter are depicted in the Maha Vira as historic political enemies of the Ukrainians, and the religious calendar elaborated by Lev Sylenko includes a Day of the People's Anger meant to inspire indignation towards the oppression endured in the past by the Ukrainian people.[79] Responding to both historical foreign oppression and the contemporary socio-political problems of Ukraine, some Sylenkoites have proposed projects to strengthen the identity of the Ukrainians; for instance, the Sylenkoite Bohdan Klymchak, from Lviv, a political prisoner during the Soviet Union, proposed the project of Oaza-Hora, a massive multilayered, terraced, mountain-like shrine of national awareness, dedicated to Ukrainian historical heroes and political prisoners of the Soviet regime.[80]

Ivakhiv observed that many Sylenkoites, like other Rodnovers, espouse political ideas very similar to those of the European New Right, with a focus on "lifestyle, family, community, and ritual practice", as well as "pronounced ethic of honour, continuity with and responsibility before one's ancestors, and a land-based work ethic", and an opposition to the Western world led by the United States and their liberal values.[81] Many Sylenkoites think that the Ukrainians are threatened by modern influences that by destroying traditional morality would be meant to "destroy the white population".[82] In 2001, on the tenth anniversary of the independence of Ukraine, the periodical of RUNVira, Slovo Oriyiv, stated that "Today we've simply divided up our [former] total dependence on Moscow among Moscow, Washington, Israel, Europe, and God knows who else".[81] Sylenkoism found support from various political parties in Ukraine, including the People's Democratic Party.[14]

Relations with Christianity edit

Lev Sylenko described Christianity as a "nomadic Judaism" that was forcefully imposed on Kievan Rus' by Vladimir the Great (c. 958–1015).[83] One of the goals of the Sylenkoite movement is specifically to "drive out [of Ukraine] the predatory Muscovite Christian Church" (the Russian Orthodox Church).[14] Regarding the Christianisation of Kievan Rus', Sylenko commented:[83]

One had to disown one's own, that which was sacred; to disown the holy things of one's ancestors, and 'with fear and trembling' to kneel and worship alien idols — icons depicting alien gods, brought from Greece.

— Lev Sylenko, The Wisdom of Ukrainian Truth: A Catechism

Christianity is seen as an external foreign force which attempts to destroy indigenous cultures by blending them into a global cultural pattern in order to play down ethnic differences and to indoctrinate its followers with a cosmopolitan attitude.[83] According to Sylenko, Christianity leads to the development of a false consciousness in people:[83]

Ukrainian children go to school [and] open their abc textbooks where Nazareth, not Kyiv, is given more space and attention. The teacher presents the first concepts to them: 'When the star of Bethlehem appears in the sky, little Jesus will come to visit children [...] and there will be Holy Supper and caroling in every house'. 'I am a little Ukrainian girl' and 'I am a little Ukrainian boy' — we glorify Nazareth, Bethlehem and the Jordan River. The first impressions of children's feelings, thoughts, and worries are devoted to non-Ukrainian holy things. Ukrainian children are happy that little Jesus is born; they become sad that he becomes crucified [and] then happy again that he is resurrected.

— Lev Sylenko, Maha Vira: Day 50

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The name "Church of Ukrainian Native Faith" is shared by both RUNVira and the non-Sylenkoite Rodnover organisation established by the followers of Volodymyr Shaian in Canada in 1981, led by Shaian's disciple Myroslav Sytnyk, which later gave rise in Ukraine to Halyna Lozko's Federation of Ukrainian Rodnovers.[3] Sytnyk was also originally connected with RUNVira.[4]
  2. ^ The scholar Mariya Lesiv noted the similarity between the foundation narratives of Sylenkoism and Christianity, at the same time emphasising the difference that while Jesus was born of the Holy Spirit, Sylenko was born of the love of his ancestors.[32]
  3. ^ Within the religion, Lev Sylenko is compared to the philosophers, prophets and religious reformers of the Axial Age: Zarathustra, Confucius, Buddha and Muhammad.[36]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Lesiv 2013b, p. 47.
  2. ^ "Ukrainian Native Faith Church". Washington, D.C., United States: Library of Congress.
  3. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 202; Lesiv 2013b, pp. 50–51.
  4. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 177, note 8.
  5. ^ Gaidukov 2000, p. 27; Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  6. ^ a b Gaidukov 2000, p. 27; Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 17; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  7. ^ Gaidukov 2000, p. 27; Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 17; Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 224; Lesiv 2009, p. 202; Lesiv 2013a, p. 130; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  8. ^ Gaidukov 2000, p. 27; Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12.
  9. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 16; Lesiv 2013a, p. 130.
  10. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 11; Lesiv 2013b, p. 41.
  11. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 11.
  12. ^ Gaidukov 2000, p. 27; Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12; Lesiv 2013b, p. 42.
  13. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12; Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 217.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Gaidukov 2000, p. 27.
  15. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 16, 18, 22.
  16. ^ Shnirelman 2002, p. 208.
  17. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 16.
  18. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 22.
  19. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 213.
  20. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 209.
  21. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12; Lesiv 2013b, p. 45.
  22. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 17, 32, note 15; Lesiv 2013b, p. 45.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Lesiv 2013b, p. 45.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 12.
  25. ^ a b c Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 17.
  26. ^ Lesiv 2013b, pp. 47, 153.
  27. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 19–20.
  28. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 19–20; Lesiv 2013b, pp. 47, 153.
  29. ^ a b c d Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 18; Lesiv 2013b, p. 45.
  30. ^ Lesiv 2013a, p. 130; Lesiv 2013b, p. 91.
  31. ^ a b c Lesiv 2013a, p. 134; Lesiv 2013b, p. 129.
  32. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 130.
  33. ^ a b c Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 18.
  34. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 18; Lesiv 2013b, pp. 3, 5, 41.
  35. ^ Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 18.
  36. ^ a b c Lesiv 2009, p. 210; Lesiv 2013b, p. 91.
  37. ^ a b Lesiv 2013b, p. 95.
  38. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 105.
  39. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 157.
  40. ^ Lesiv 2013b, pp. 45–46.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lesiv 2013b, p. 46.
  42. ^ Lesiv 2013b, pp. 147–149.
  43. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 149.
  44. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 158.
  45. ^ a b Lesiv 2013b, pp. 47, 49.
  46. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 137.
  47. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 155.
  48. ^ a b c Lesiv 2013b, p. 80.
  49. ^ Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 234; Lesiv 2013b, p. 80.
  50. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 81.
  51. ^ a b c d Lesiv 2013b, p. 152.
  52. ^ a b Lesiv 2009, p. 211.
  53. ^ a b c d Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 17; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  54. ^ a b Lesiv 2013b, pp. 152–153.
  55. ^ a b Lesiv 2013b, p. 154.
  56. ^ a b Lesiv 2013b, p. 153.
  57. ^ Ivakhiv 2015a, p. 12; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  58. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 17; Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 224; Lesiv 2009, p. 202; Lesiv 2013a, p. 130; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  59. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 17–18.
  60. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 208.
  61. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 17–18, 24.
  62. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 159.
  63. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 19; Lesiv 2013b, p. 46.
  64. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 19; Lesiv 2013b, pp. 153–154.
  65. ^ a b c Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 19.
  66. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 20; Lesiv 2013b, p. 44.
  67. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 20.
  68. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 20; Lesiv 2013b, p. 45.
  69. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, pp. 20–21.
  70. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 24.
  71. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 21.
  72. ^ Lesiv 2013b, pp. 30, 47.
  73. ^ Ivakhiv 2005a, p. 19; Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 234.
  74. ^ Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 234.
  75. ^ a b c Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 232.
  76. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 42.
  77. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 203, note 13; Lesiv 2013b, p. 49.
  78. ^ Lesiv 2009, p. 206.
  79. ^ Lesiv 2017, p. 139.
  80. ^ Lesiv 2013b, pp. 74–76.
  81. ^ a b Ivakhiv 2005b, p. 235.
  82. ^ Lesiv 2013b, p. 74.
  83. ^ a b c d Lesiv 2013b, p. 68.

Sources edit

  • Gaidukov, Alexey V. (2000). [Ideology and practice of Slavic Neopaganism] (PDF) (Thesis) (in Russian). Saint Petersburg: Herzen University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2021.
  • Ivakhiv, Adrian (2005a). (PDF). Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. 8 (3): 7–38. doi:10.1525/nr.2005.8.3.7. JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2005.8.3.7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2020.
  •  ———  (2005b). "The Revival of Ukrainian Native Faith". In Michael F. Strmiska (ed.). Modern Paganism in World Cultures: Comparative Perspectives. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. pp. 209–39. ISBN 9781851096084.
  • Lesiv, Mariya (2009). (PDF). The Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies. 11 (2). doi:10.1558/pome.v11i2.197. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2019.
  •  ———  (2013a). "Ukrainian Paganism and Syncretism: 'This Is Indeed Ours!'". In Kaarina Aitamurto; Scott Simpson (eds.). Modern Pagan and Native Faith Movements in Central and Eastern Europe. Durham: Acumen. pp. 128–145. ISBN 9781844656622.
  •  ———  (2013b). The Return of Ancestral Gods: Modern Ukrainian Paganism as an Alternative Vision for a Nation. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773542624.
  •  ———  (2017). "Blood Brothers or Blood Enemies: Ukrainian Pagans' Beliefs and Responses to the Ukraine-Russia Crisis". In Kathryn Rountree (ed.). Cosmopolitanism, Nationalism, and Modern Paganism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 133–156. ISBN 9781137570406.
  • Shnirelman, Victor A. (2002). "'Christians! Go home': A Revival of Neo-Paganism between the Baltic Sea and Transcaucasia (An Overview)". Journal of Contemporary Religion. 17 (2): 197–211. doi:10.1080/13537900220125181. S2CID 51303383.

External links edit

native, ukrainian, national, faith, ukrainian, Рі, дна, Украї, нська, Націона, льна, Ві, ра, rídna, ukrayíns, natsionál, víra, widely, known, acronym, РУНВі, ра, runvira, also, called, sylenkoism, Силенкоїзм, sylenkianism, Силенкіянство, institutionally, also,. The Native Ukrainian National Faith Ukrainian Ri dna Ukrayi nska Naciona lna Vi ra Ridna Ukrayins ka Natsional na Vira widely known by the acronym RUNVi ra RUNVira also called Sylenkoism Silenkoyizm or Sylenkianism Silenkiyanstvo and institutionally also known as the Church of Ukrainian Native Faith or Church of the Faithful of the Native Ukrainian National Faith 2 a is a branch of Rodnovery Slavic Native Faith specifically linked to the Ukrainians that was founded in the mid 1960s by Lev Sylenko 1921 2008 among the Ukrainian diaspora in North America 5 and first introduced in Ukraine in 1991 6 Sylenkoite communities are also present in Russia and Belarus as well as in Western Europe and Oceania 7 The doctrine of this tradition is codified into a sacred book composed by Sylenko himself the Maha Vira Great Faith 8 Sylenkoite theology is characterised by a solar monotheism 9 The symbol of RUNVira a trysuttia representing Prav Yav and Nav encircled by the Sun that is the visible Dazhboh 1 Contents 1 Overview 2 Beliefs 2 1 Historiosophy of the Maha Vira 2 2 Theology and cosmology 3 Practices 3 1 Priesthood 3 2 Rites and holidays 3 3 Temples and altars 4 Organisations 4 1 OSIDU RUNVira 4 2 OSID RUNVira 4 3 Union of Native Ukrainian Faith 5 Symbolism 6 Sociology 6 1 Demographics 6 2 Political ideas 6 3 Relations with Christianity 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 External linksOverview editLev Sylenko 1921 2008 was a disciple of the earliest ideologue of Ukrainian Rodnovery Volodymyr Shaian 1908 1974 and was a member of the religio political anti Soviet Order of the Knights of the Sun God Orden Lytsariv Boha Sontsia founded by the same Shaian in the 1940s 10 Sylenko was initiated into the group with the name Orlyhora Eagle Mountain 11 In the 1940s Sylenko emigrated to Canada and then to the United States where in the 1960s he founded the Native Ukrainian National Faith 12 By the 1970s Shaian and Sylenko had parted and taken two different paths as Sylenko had begun to elaborate a systematised doctrine of Rodnovery which was rejected by Shaian 10 After travels in Europe and Asia Sylenko compiled the Maha Vira the holy book of his doctrine and published it in 1979 13 The Maha Vira was preceded in 1969 by the poem The Mage s Gate in which Sylenko outlined in a nutshell the foundations of the doctrine 14 The scholar Adrian Ivakhiv defined Sylenkoism as a reformed Rodnovery a comprehensive and systematic attempt to create an intellectually coherent synthetic new religion based on Slavic heritage with elements of Theosophy deism and messianism 15 The scholar Victor Shnirelman defined Sylenkoism as a monotheism based on Slavic heritage and as such he compared it to the later Russian Religion developed in Russia by Viktor M Kandyba 16 Due to its monotheism and its early emphasis on the charismatic figure of the founder Sylenkoism has been deemed by other Ukrainian Rodnover movements as a not authentically native religion 17 Members of Sylenkoite churches however consider themselves Rodnovers in all respects 17 Halyna Lozko the leader of the Federation of Ukrainian Rodnovers which continues Volodymyr Shaian s orthodoxy advanced vehement critiques of Sylenkoism calling Lev Sylenko a false prophet and accusing him of having tried to lead the Ukrainians into the Abrahamic religions quagmire of cosmopolitan monotheism 18 Lozko criticised Sylenko for cancelling the ancestral gods proclaiming absolute monotheism and attaching his own characteristics to God 19 Despite this Lev Sylenko himself rejected the Abrahamisms and Christianity in particular deeming the latter a nomadic Judaism 20 Beliefs editHistoriosophy of the Maha Vira edit nbsp Lev Sylenko holding the Maha Vira 1979 The Maha Vira literally Great Faith is the holy writing used within the organisations of the Sylenkoite movement 21 published in 1979 and consisting in 1 427 pages 22 Its title blends the Sanskrit term maha great and the Ukrainian term vira faith 23 It was composed by Lev Sylenko himself as a synthesis of philosophical ideas relying upon historical and archaeological sources 24 presenting a historiosophical account of eleven thousand years intertwined with theological and cosmological doctrines and a prophetic message for the future 25 The book includes a comparative lexicon of Sanskrit Ukrainian and English language 24 The book tells the history of Oriiana or Orania identified as the Cucuteni Trypillia culture 3000 5000 BCE assumed to have been the epicentre of the Indo Europeans or Aryans whom the book calls Oriians evoking a connection with the Ukrainian word for plowing oraty 24 The progenitors of the Oriians and therefore of Ukrainians are Father Or Or and Mother Lel Lel who are frequently depicted in RUNVira shrines and temples 26 Or is also called Orii Orij or Arii Arij Orya Orya and Yari or Yuri and identified as the solar deity Yarilo while Lel is also known as Lelii Lelij and Lelya Lelya 27 28 According to the book the Oriians are the original progenitors of the white race and the earliest European civilisation corresponding to or preceding the Cucuteni Trypillia complex developed along the banks of the Dnieper 24 From the Oriians descended the Scythians the Russians and the Ukrainians 24 The Ukrainians are regarded as the most direct descendants of the Oriians and therefore as superior to all Europeans 23 Kyiv is described as the most ancient city of the white race 23 The Oriians are described in the book as the carriers of the philosophy later written down in the Vedas developed as the Oriians migrated in different directions including the north of the Indian subcontinent 24 The Maha Vira is described by Ivakhiv as a systematic intellectual construct grounded on the premise of Ukrainian ethnocultural primordialism or essentialism 29 The book explains that during its evolution the human species has divided itself into many distinct ethnocultural groups ethne or ethnoi singular ethnos the Greek word for ethnicity each of which undergoes its life cycle flourishing and perishing according to its own development 29 Sylenko argues that without such division the human species would be too fragile as the division allows for a diversity of experiments some successful and some others not allowing for a continuation of evolution 29 The formation of an ethnos is always accompanied by the systematisation of originally unorganised beliefs into a coherent religious doctrine representing a shared system of ideas unifying the ethnos the Maha Vira intends to represent such systematisation for the Ukrainians 29 Theology and cosmology edit nbsp The tryzub or trysuttia as a representation of the theo cosmology of Ukrainian Sylenkoism According to the definition given by Sylenko himself his doctrine is that of a solar absolute monotheism 30 Sylenko proclaimed himself a prophet bringing to the Slavs a new understanding of God that according to him corresponds to their own and original understanding of God 31 The Sylenkoites believe that he acquired this knowledge through the breath of his ancestors in his soul being united with them by divine holiness 31 b According to Sylenko s own words 31 I was born out of their the ancestors love And this is why I love everything that is my own so devotedly and tenderly as they loved it Their blood flows in my blood Their souls live in my soul They are my love God s grace came upon me and following the will of God I have proclaimed a new understanding of God Lev Sylenko The Wisdom of Ukrainian Truth A Catechism Sylenkoite theology may be further defined as pantheistic or panentheistic 33 In the Maha Vira the supreme God identifying himself as Dazhboh Dazhbog meaning Giving God or Sun God in the ancient Slavic tradition 34 proclaims through his prophet Lev Sylenko 33 I am Dazhboh I am in all things and all things are in me Dazhboh is described as the life giving energy of the cosmos in Sylenko s own words it is light endlessness gravitation eternity movement action the energy of unconscious and conscious being 35 Sylenkoite cosmology conceives Dazhboh as containing the three worlds Prav Yav and Nav 1 As in broader Rodnovery Prav is considered the right law of nature Yav is the visible manifested world while Nav is the invisible spiritual world 1 Sylenko is seen by his followers as making the same operation that Axial Age thinkers made in other parts of the world and among other peoples by moving away from polytheism and affirming the concept of single God 36 g Sylenkoite doctrine emphasises in evolutionary terms that monotheism is a higher level of spiritual development than polytheism and the latter should be rejected since by the words of Sylenko s writings Dazhboh has no need of any ambassadors in the form of higher or lower deities 36 Sylenko was profoundly influenced by the discourse about a European superiority communicated through the concept of monotheism and he envisioned the Ukrainians as the superior people who will extend to all Europeans his operation of spiritual progress spreading the European understanding of God implying a reformulation of local European ethnic polytheistic religions into Sylenkoite monotheism 37 In Sylenko s own words 37 Humanity languishes in the darkness it is absolutely necessary to feed its brain with new food Ukraine is called by the Heavens to show Europe the new way of spiritual development Lev Sylenko A Guest from the Temple of Ancestors Despite their monotheism some Sylenkoites take part in initiatives of non Sylenkoite Rodnovers involving polytheistic worship 38 or listen to the music of Zhyvosyl Liutyi dedicated to multiple deities 39 Practices editPriesthood edit nbsp Five Sylenkoite tatos and a mama distinguished by wearing blue and yellow sviadanas Sylenkoite communities are led by male and female priests respectively called RUNtatos Native Ukrainian National fathers and RUNmamas Native Ukrainian National mothers 23 Not all the branches of Sylenkoism use the terms tato and mama to refer to the clergy notably OSID RUNVira a branch of the original RUNVira church that further reworked Sylenko s original teachings uses simply the term priests 1 Male priests significantly outnumber their female counterparts 23 When Lev Sylenko was alive until 2008 ordinations were conferred by him himself as a candidate had to make an application to him supported by letters of recommendation from the same candidate s religious community 40 Sylenkoite priests are expected to teach the congregation how to apply the religion s tenets in everyday life and to give advice to the congregation s members on various matters regarding personal and social life 41 A good priest is required to show loyalty towards the religious doctrines and to have some specific personality traits he should be self controlled he should speak softly and behave in a noble way he should never judge accuse or intimidate anybody and he should never show anger 41 Priests are distinguished by wearing a sviadana that is to say a long narrow ribbon made of blue and yellow fabric with black and red horizontal bands draped around the neck 42 Male priests wear embroidered shirts usually combined with European suits 43 Rites and holidays edit nbsp Painting representing the tree of life by the painter Viktor Kryzhanivskyi 1950 2016 very appreciated by Sylenkoites 44 The Maha Vira contains descriptions of rituals and holidays and a calendar which begins its chronology eleven thousand years ago when the Paleolithic culture of Mezine reached its apogee 23 Many of the rituals and holidays described in the book are derived from Ukrainian village folklore interpreted and adjusted by Sylenko himself while others are newly created 23 A detailed description of Sylenkoite practices is also given in Sylenko s Sacred Book of Rituals which was first published in the United States 41 The holidays comprise the Great Day of Dazhboh s Light on 14 April corresponding to the celebration of Easter in Ukrainian villages 41 Other holidays are dedicated to important figures of Ukrainian history including Sviatoslav I 935 972 the last traditional religious prince of Kievan Rus and a great warrior who expanded the borders of his country and Taras Shevchenko 1814 1861 whom Sylenko regarded as a critic of Christianity and promoter of the ancestral faith 41 Other Sylenkoite holidays are dedicated to contemporary social and environmental issues including the Day of Animal Protection on 28 April and the Day of the People s Anger on 5 November a day dedicated to indignation towards intruders and oppressors of the Ukrainian nation 41 27 September is the Day of the Holy Maha Vira and the birthday of the Native Prophet Lev Sylenko 41 Sylenkoite lifecycle rituals include the blessing of a newborn child marriages funerals and the commemoration of the dead 41 Every new convert to the religion is also required to choose a native Slavic name and goes through a ritual of name giving or renaming 45 The latter is especially needed when the convert has a foreign given name and even more so when such name is associated with Christianity 45 A weekly worship ceremony held on Sunday called the Holy Hour of Self Reflection constitutes the main setting for most rites 41 Although Sylenko allows some flexibility in the ritual practice he insists that the Maha Vira should be the main source for their preparation 1 The priest is supposed to choose lectures from the Maha Vira pertaining to the theme of the weekly Holy Hour for example on the Day of Taras Shevchenko the priest reads the passages of the book dedicated to Shevchenko s life and legacy while on folk holidays the priest reads those passages of the book that describe how a particular holiday was celebrated in the past and how it should be observed today 1 Despite Sylenko s efforts to establish a unified liturgy later leaders and branches of the movement approached his teaching selectively 1 For instance OSID RUNVira practises a Service of Honouring God Nabozhenstvo elaborated by Bohdan Ostrovskyi that only vaguely resembles the Holy Hour of Self Reflection not containing much reading from the Maha Vira and focusing instead on colourful ritual action and singing 1 OSID RUNVira also recognises the holiday of Kupala Night as part of the Sylenkoite calendar and celebrates it through a complex ritual recreated by the same Ostrovskyi 46 At the 2008 Triennial RUNVira Council held in Bohoyavlensky Mykolaiv one of the major issues addressed by the delegates was the growing diversification and inconsistency among the rituals performed by different Sylenkoite congregations across Ukraine as different leaders were introducing too many innovations in their congregations liturgy most of the delegates agreed that standardisation was important and they called for a more strict following of Sylenko s liturgy book 47 Like other Rodnovers especially Cossack sorcerers many Sylenkoites practise martial arts 48 The most widely known figure of Ukrainian martial arts in the 2010s is the Sylenkoite follower Volodymyr Pylat the founder and teacher of Boiovyi Hopak a martial form of the traditional Cossack dance of hopak combined with a philosophical worldview 49 Before turning to Slavic martial arts Pylat was a sensei in Kyokushin Karate and he studied other Eastern martial arts styles 50 His school is located in Lviv and his work is appreciated both by Sylenkoites and by other Rodnovers 48 The basic philosophical tenets of the practice are expressed by Pylat himself in the following terms 48 Fighting for truth and against the forces of Darkness and Evil in the name of victory for Light Goodness and Love positive creative powers that facilitate the development of the Universe the creation of the most perfect forms of life and the transformation of the physical into the spiritual Temples and altars edit nbsp Sylenkoite priests holding a ceremony in a hall in Kyiv At the centre of the scene there is an altar with the symbol of Dazhboh a blue and a yellow candle cups for soil and water a portrait of Lev Sylenko and a copy of the Maha Vira Sylenkoite ceremonies are usually held inside temples and in front of altars 51 Two important temples include the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko located in Bohoyavlensky Mykolaiv the village in southern Ukraine where Lev Sylenko was born 52 and the Temple of Oriiana in Spring Glen New York in the United States 53 Stationary altars are located in temples or in people s homes as domestic altars 51 They are set up on a table covered with four different embroidered cloths of which the top and bottom pieces are decorated with meandering designs associated with the culture of Mezine 51 In the middle of the altar is located a portable symbol of Dazhboh a mandatory attribute for all Sylenkoite services 51 There are also two figurines representing Or and Lel two candles in candlesticks a sviadana flowers a container for holy soil 54 and another one for holy water 55 According to the instructions of Sylenko ears of wheat should be placed on the altar to symbolise the agricultural origins of the Ukrainians the holy soil should be from the fields of Trypillia and the holy water should be from the Dnieper 55 The altars of OSID RUNVira the branch of the movement which further elaborated Sylenko s ideas and does not recognise him as the ultimate prophet but as the main ideologist of the religion do not display many references to Sylenko himself apart from the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rituals 56 On the contrary the altars of OSIDU RUNVira the branch of the movement which recognises Sylenko as the ultimate prophet apart from displaying the books always also display a portrait of Sylenko himself whom is object of worship 56 Organisations editThe early church of the Native Ukrainian National Faith was founded by Lev Sylenko in 1966 in the United States among the Ukrainian diaspora 57 The first congregation was established in Chicago and later congregations were founded in Canada England Germany Australia and New Zealand 58 The headquarters of the church were set at the Temple of Oriiana located in Spring Glen New York in the region of the Catskill Mountains 6 The Sylenkoite movement was introduced in Ukraine in the early 1990s 53 The first congregation was registered by the government in Kyiv in 1991 less than a month after the collapse of the Soviet Union 53 By the end of the decade the number of registered communities had grown to fifty and other tens were active throughout the country without formal registration 25 The movement also spread to Russia and Belarus 14 During the 1980s Sylenkoism split into at least four major branches 59 and many other communities led by several individual tatos or male spiritual leaders 60 The contemporary four distinct Sylenkoite churches which administer more than one hundred congregations spread throughout Ukraine are the Association of Sons and Daughters of the Native Ukrainian National Faith OSID RUNVira the Association of Sons and Daughters of Ukraine of the Native Ukrainian National Faith OSIDU RUNVira Volodymyr Chornyi s Lviv based western branch of OSIDU RUNVira and the Union of Native Ukrainian Faith SRUV 61 OSIDU RUNVira edit nbsp Sylenkoite priest preaching at the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko of OSIDU RUNVira located where Sylenko was born in Bohoyavlensky Mykolaiv Ukraine 52 The background wall paintings representing Or and Lel were made by Viktor Kryzhanivskyi 62 Among Sylenkoite organisations the Associations of Sons and Daughters of Ukraine of the Native Ukrainian National Faith OSIDU RUNVira OSIDU RUNVira is that which has maintained direct relationship with Sylenko fully accepting him as prophet 53 As of the mid 2000s the leader of the organisation was Bohdan Savchenko 25 The OSIDU Sylenkoites consider themselves a transformed and completed Rodnovery focusing on the monotheistic belief in the impersonal Dazhboh the energy of the cosmos 33 Members of OSIDU RUNVira practise a weekly Holy Hour of Self Reflection which includes readings from the Maha Vira sermons commentaries ancestor worship prayers and hymns and ends with the singing of Ukraine s national anthem 63 Liturgical elements for the ceremony include the symbol of Dazhboh a jar with water from a holy river a box containing soil from a holy ground two candles wheat ears flowers poppies and cornflowers a sviadana copies of the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rituals and a portrait of Lev Sylenko 64 OSIDU Sylenkoites are open to the celebration of holidays together with non Sylenkoite Rodnovers with traditional folk singing bonfire jumping circle and spiral dancing burning or drowning the effigies of the deities Kupalo and Marena and meeting the Sun s first rays the next morning 65 Some OSIDU Sylenkoite congregations also organise projects for the wider public a community in Kharkiv for instance creates rai sady paradise gardens and organises a regular festival dedicated to ecology and spirituality 65 OSID RUNVira edit nbsp Temple of Oriiana belonging to the OSID RUNVira in Spring Glen New York United States The Association of Sons and Daughters of the Native Ukrainian National Faith OSID RUNVira OSID RUNVira is the largest among Sylenkoite organisations 27 While recognising him as the founder of the movement OSID RUNVira rejected Lev Sylenko s ultimate authority and sought a more multilateral approach to Rodnovery remaining open to further developments independent from Sylenko 66 OSID RUNVira is currently led by a Holy Council presided by the folk musician Bohdan Ostrovskyi in Kyiv 67 Ostrovskyi was the founder of the first congregation of Sylenkoites in Ukraine in 1991 67 OSID RUNVira is the owner of the Temple of Oriiana in Spring Glen which the organisation took over by legal means in the late 1990s after a dispute over the ownership with OSIDU RUNVira and especially with Lev Sylenko s secretary and confidante Tetiana Lysenko Svitoslava 68 Like OSIDU Sylenkoites OSID Sylenkoites too celebrate weekly Holy Hours but the OSID ritual is eclectic in incorporating non Sylenkoite elements such as readings of the Book of Veles or of Taras Shevchenko s poetry 67 As an alternative to the Holy Hour Ostrovskyi has also elaborated a Service of Honouring God Nabozhenstvo which puts less focus on the Maha Vira and emphasises ritual action and singing instead 1 OSID liturgy includes items like the didukh that is a braided wheat sheaf and an object representing fire besides water and earth 67 and besides all the other elements present in the shared Sylenkoite liturgy like the symbol of Dazhboh two candles a sviadana and copies of the Maha Vira and the Sacred Book of Rites 54 Ancestor worship is central to OSID Sylenkoism too especially the celebration of heroes of Ukrainian and Slavic history including the Oriians supreme forefather Or and modern Ukrainian heroes such as Taras Shevchenko Ivan Franko Bohdan Khmelnytsky and Hryhory Skovoroda 67 However compared to OSIDU RUNVira OSID Sylenkoism puts more emphasis on traditional Slavic seasonal holidays in honour of the gods Kupala Perun Lada and Dana 67 OSID RUNVira also notably uses de Christianised names for some of its holidays such as Christmas of Dazhboh s Light and Easter of the Eternal Resurrection 67 Union of Native Ukrainian Faith edit The Union of Native Ukrainian Faith Sobor Ridnoyi Ukrayinskoyi Viri Sobor Ridnoyi Ukrayins koyi Viry SRUV is another organisation of the Sylenkoite movement more independent than the others from the original tradition and more eclectic in its interpretation of the religion 67 It was founded in 1994 under the leadership of Oleh Bezverkhyi author of several semi scholarly pamphlets on Ukrainian Rodnovery and mysticism raceology and related topics 69 The headquarters of SRUV Sylenkoism are in Vinnytsia 67 The SRUV has been more open than the other Sylenkoite organisations to an ecumenical movement of conciliation between Sylenkoites and non Sylenkoite Rodnovers taking part in the organisation of some pan Rodnover viches 70 Besides the Maha Vira of Lev Sylenko SRUV Sylenkoism also relies upon the writings of Shaian Shkavrytko Kokriatskyi Orion Lisovyi and others 67 While retaining Sylenkoite monotheism the SRUV promotes what it considers a more authentically Ukrainian theology with an emphasis on mysticism 71 SRUV Sylenkoites consider Podolia to be the heart of the ancient Oriian civilisation being the place where remains of a large Scythian temple and the Zbruch Idol representing Svetovid were found as well as the place where ancient Slavic religion was defended the longest and most strenuously by the Bolokhivsky princes ostensibly as late as 1620 71 Symbolism editSylenkoite symbolism relies much upon historical and contemporary Ukrainian national symbolism 1 The main symbol of Sylenkoism features the colours blue and yellow and includes the tryzub Ukrainian trizub one of the historical symbols of the Rurikids which is featured on the modern coat of arms of Ukraine 1 The latter is called trysuttia in Sylenkoism and is held to represent the three worlds Prav Yav and Nav 1 The trident is encircled by a stylised Sun symbol of Dazhboh 1 Sylenkoism also draws from the Paleolithic culture of Mezine for inspiration and one of the most important symbols within the religion is the meander an ornamental design winding in and out considered related to Mezine and perceived as the most archaic form of ancestral spiritual expression 72 Sociology editDemographics edit nbsp Communal worship of OSIDU Sylenkoites at the Temple of the Nativity of Lev Sylenko in Bohoyavlensky Mykolaiv Writing in 2005 the scholar Adrian Ivakhiv observed that compared to broader Rodnovery Sylenkoism tended to attract a more mature segment of society namely people of around 40 years of age or older although sometimes younger members took leadership functions 65 The adherents of the movement overlapped with folk and traditional music revival groups traditional martial arts groups with nationalist and ultra nationalist political groups such as the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian People s Self Defence UNA UNSO with other cultural groups such as the National Writers Union of Ukraine and the Traditional Association of Ukrainian Cossacks a body founded in 2001 and having members in nineteen Ukrainian provinces 73 According to the scholar Alexey V Gaidukov in the 1990s the Sylenkoite doctrine was studied in university programs and the flower of the country s Ukraine s intelligentsia including writers Serhiy Plachynda Anatoliy Kachan Mykola Luhovyk and artists joined the church 14 Volodymyr Pylat a leader of OSIDU RUNVira was involved in the rebirth in western Ukraine of a martial art version of the hopak a traditional Cossack dance 74 Despite an original animosity between Sylenkoites and non Sylenkoite Ukrainian Rodnovers since the early 2000s there has been an increasing movement of ecumenical cooperation between the two factions 75 In 2003 forty one delegates from communities across Ukraine and thirty eight registered guests gathered in Kyiv at the First Forum of Ukrainian Rodnovers presided by Iurii Shilov Oleh Bezverkhyi of SRUV Sylenkoism and Petro Ruban 75 A Second Forum of Ukrainian Rodnovers followed ten months later attended by fifty one delegates forty six participants and twenty six other guests 75 SRUV Sylenkoism has been more open than both OSIDU RUNVira and OSID RUNVira to this ecumenical movement of Ukrainian Rodnovery 70 Many Rodnover groups in contemporary Ukraine rely upon the teachings of both Shaian and Sylenko 76 Political ideas edit The scholar Mariya Lesiv noted that Sylenkoism is the most politically charged among Ukrainian Rodnover streams 77 and that differently from other Rodnovers who put more emphasis on the shared identity of the Slavic peoples the Sylenkoites tend to emphasise the unique characteristics of the Ukrainians and especially their distinction from the Russians 78 Some Sylenkoites consider the Ukrainians to be the true descendants of the early medieval Russes and of Kievan Rus while the modern Russians to be for the most part Russified Tatars of late medieval Muscovy Muscovites 14 The latter are depicted in the Maha Vira as historic political enemies of the Ukrainians and the religious calendar elaborated by Lev Sylenko includes a Day of the People s Anger meant to inspire indignation towards the oppression endured in the past by the Ukrainian people 79 Responding to both historical foreign oppression and the contemporary socio political problems of Ukraine some Sylenkoites have proposed projects to strengthen the identity of the Ukrainians for instance the Sylenkoite Bohdan Klymchak from Lviv a political prisoner during the Soviet Union proposed the project of Oaza Hora a massive multilayered terraced mountain like shrine of national awareness dedicated to Ukrainian historical heroes and political prisoners of the Soviet regime 80 Ivakhiv observed that many Sylenkoites like other Rodnovers espouse political ideas very similar to those of the European New Right with a focus on lifestyle family community and ritual practice as well as pronounced ethic of honour continuity with and responsibility before one s ancestors and a land based work ethic and an opposition to the Western world led by the United States and their liberal values 81 Many Sylenkoites think that the Ukrainians are threatened by modern influences that by destroying traditional morality would be meant to destroy the white population 82 In 2001 on the tenth anniversary of the independence of Ukraine the periodical of RUNVira Slovo Oriyiv stated that Today we ve simply divided up our former total dependence on Moscow among Moscow Washington Israel Europe and God knows who else 81 Sylenkoism found support from various political parties in Ukraine including the People s Democratic Party 14 Relations with Christianity edit Lev Sylenko described Christianity as a nomadic Judaism that was forcefully imposed on Kievan Rus by Vladimir the Great c 958 1015 83 One of the goals of the Sylenkoite movement is specifically to drive out of Ukraine the predatory Muscovite Christian Church the Russian Orthodox Church 14 Regarding the Christianisation of Kievan Rus Sylenko commented 83 One had to disown one s own that which was sacred to disown the holy things of one s ancestors and with fear and trembling to kneel and worship alien idols icons depicting alien gods brought from Greece Lev Sylenko The Wisdom of Ukrainian Truth A Catechism Christianity is seen as an external foreign force which attempts to destroy indigenous cultures by blending them into a global cultural pattern in order to play down ethnic differences and to indoctrinate its followers with a cosmopolitan attitude 83 According to Sylenko Christianity leads to the development of a false consciousness in people 83 Ukrainian children go to school and open their abc textbooks where Nazareth not Kyiv is given more space and attention The teacher presents the first concepts to them When the star of Bethlehem appears in the sky little Jesus will come to visit children and there will be Holy Supper and caroling in every house I am a little Ukrainian girl and I am a little Ukrainian boy we glorify Nazareth Bethlehem and the Jordan River The first impressions of children s feelings thoughts and worries are devoted to non Ukrainian holy things Ukrainian children are happy that little Jesus is born they become sad that he becomes crucified and then happy again that he is resurrected Lev Sylenko Maha Vira Day 50See also editRodnovery Kandybaism TheosophyNotes edit The name Church of Ukrainian Native Faith is shared by both RUNVira and the non Sylenkoite Rodnover organisation established by the followers of Volodymyr Shaian in Canada in 1981 led by Shaian s disciple Myroslav Sytnyk which later gave rise in Ukraine to Halyna Lozko s Federation of Ukrainian Rodnovers 3 Sytnyk was also originally connected with RUNVira 4 The scholar Mariya Lesiv noted the similarity between the foundation narratives of Sylenkoism and Christianity at the same time emphasising the difference that while Jesus was born of the Holy Spirit Sylenko was born of the love of his ancestors 32 Within the religion Lev Sylenko is compared to the philosophers prophets and religious reformers of the Axial Age Zarathustra Confucius Buddha and Muhammad 36 References editCitations edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Lesiv 2013b p 47 Ukrainian Native Faith Church Washington D C United States Library of Congress Lesiv 2009 p 202 Lesiv 2013b pp 50 51 Lesiv 2013b p 177 note 8 Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 Lesiv 2013b p 44 a b Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a p 17 Lesiv 2013b p 44 Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a p 17 Ivakhiv 2005b p 224 Lesiv 2009 p 202 Lesiv 2013a p 130 Lesiv 2013b p 44 Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 Ivakhiv 2005a p 16 Lesiv 2013a p 130 a b Ivakhiv 2005a p 11 Lesiv 2013b p 41 Ivakhiv 2005a p 11 Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 Lesiv 2013b p 42 Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 Ivakhiv 2005b p 217 a b c d e f Gaidukov 2000 p 27 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 16 18 22 Shnirelman 2002 p 208 a b Ivakhiv 2005a p 16 Ivakhiv 2005a p 22 Lesiv 2009 p 213 Lesiv 2009 p 209 Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 Lesiv 2013b p 45 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 17 32 note 15 Lesiv 2013b p 45 a b c d e f g Lesiv 2013b p 45 a b c d e f Ivakhiv 2005a p 12 a b c Ivakhiv 2005a p 17 Lesiv 2013b pp 47 153 a b Ivakhiv 2005a pp 19 20 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 19 20 Lesiv 2013b pp 47 153 a b c d Ivakhiv 2005a p 18 Lesiv 2013b p 45 Lesiv 2013a p 130 Lesiv 2013b p 91 a b c Lesiv 2013a p 134 Lesiv 2013b p 129 Lesiv 2013b p 130 a b c Ivakhiv 2005a p 18 Ivakhiv 2005a p 18 Lesiv 2013b pp 3 5 41 Ivakhiv 2005b p 18 a b c Lesiv 2009 p 210 Lesiv 2013b p 91 a b Lesiv 2013b p 95 Lesiv 2013b p 105 Lesiv 2013b p 157 Lesiv 2013b pp 45 46 a b c d e f g h i Lesiv 2013b p 46 Lesiv 2013b pp 147 149 Lesiv 2013b p 149 Lesiv 2013b p 158 a b Lesiv 2013b pp 47 49 Lesiv 2013b p 137 Lesiv 2013b p 155 a b c Lesiv 2013b p 80 Ivakhiv 2005b p 234 Lesiv 2013b p 80 Lesiv 2013b p 81 a b c d Lesiv 2013b p 152 a b Lesiv 2009 p 211 a b c d Ivakhiv 2005a p 17 Lesiv 2013b p 44 a b Lesiv 2013b pp 152 153 a b Lesiv 2013b p 154 a b Lesiv 2013b p 153 Ivakhiv 2015a p 12sfnm error no target CITEREFIvakhiv2015a help Lesiv 2013b p 44 Ivakhiv 2005a p 17 Ivakhiv 2005b p 224 Lesiv 2009 p 202 Lesiv 2013a p 130 Lesiv 2013b p 44 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 17 18 Lesiv 2009 p 208 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 17 18 24 Lesiv 2013b p 159 Ivakhiv 2005a p 19 Lesiv 2013b p 46 Ivakhiv 2005a p 19 Lesiv 2013b pp 153 154 a b c Ivakhiv 2005a p 19 Ivakhiv 2005a p 20 Lesiv 2013b p 44 a b c d e f g h i j Ivakhiv 2005a p 20 Ivakhiv 2005a p 20 Lesiv 2013b p 45 Ivakhiv 2005a pp 20 21 a b Ivakhiv 2005a p 24 a b Ivakhiv 2005a p 21 Lesiv 2013b pp 30 47 Ivakhiv 2005a p 19 Ivakhiv 2005b p 234 Ivakhiv 2005b p 234 a b c Ivakhiv 2005b p 232 Lesiv 2013b p 42 Lesiv 2009 p 203 note 13 Lesiv 2013b p 49 Lesiv 2009 p 206 Lesiv 2017 p 139 Lesiv 2013b pp 74 76 a b Ivakhiv 2005b p 235 Lesiv 2013b p 74 a b c d Lesiv 2013b p 68 Sources edit Gaidukov Alexey V 2000 Ideologiya i praktika slavyanskogo neoyazychestva Ideology and practice of Slavic Neopaganism PDF Thesis in Russian Saint Petersburg Herzen University Archived from the original PDF on 22 October 2021 Ivakhiv Adrian 2005a In Search of Deeper Identities Neopaganism and Native Faith in Contemporary Ukraine PDF Nova Religio The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 8 3 7 38 doi 10 1525 nr 2005 8 3 7 JSTOR 10 1525 nr 2005 8 3 7 Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2020 2005b The Revival of Ukrainian Native Faith In Michael F Strmiska ed Modern Paganism in World Cultures Comparative Perspectives Santa Barbara ABC Clio pp 209 39 ISBN 9781851096084 Lesiv Mariya 2009 Glory to Dazhboh Sun god or to All Native Gods Monotheism and Polytheism in Contemporary Ukrainian Paganism PDF The Pomegranate The International Journal of Pagan Studies 11 2 doi 10 1558 pome v11i2 197 Archived from the original PDF on 19 January 2019 2013a Ukrainian Paganism and Syncretism This Is Indeed Ours In Kaarina Aitamurto Scott Simpson eds Modern Pagan and Native Faith Movements in Central and Eastern Europe Durham Acumen pp 128 145 ISBN 9781844656622 2013b The Return of Ancestral Gods Modern Ukrainian Paganism as an Alternative Vision for a Nation Montreal and Kingston McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773542624 2017 Blood Brothers or Blood Enemies Ukrainian Pagans Beliefs and Responses to the Ukraine Russia Crisis In Kathryn Rountree ed Cosmopolitanism Nationalism and Modern Paganism New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 133 156 ISBN 9781137570406 Shnirelman Victor A 2002 Christians Go home A Revival of Neo Paganism between the Baltic Sea and Transcaucasia An Overview Journal of Contemporary Religion 17 2 197 211 doi 10 1080 13537900220125181 S2CID 51303383 External links edithttp runvira org http runvira in ua http runvira com ua http www dazhboh org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Native Ukrainian National Faith amp oldid 1191557154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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