Skip to content
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
The Baptist Paper
The Baptist Paper
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your state news
  • Classifieds
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your state news
  • Classifieds

‘No religious freedom’ in Russian-occupied areas, Ukrainian reporter says

Religious freedom no longer exists in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine, where religious leaders have been abducted and sometimes tortured, several Ukrainian journalists said during a recent visit to the United States.
  • July 31, 2024
  • Baptist Standard
  • International News, Latest News, Religious Freedom
blue and yellow striped country flag
(Unsplash photo)

‘No religious freedom’ in Russian-occupied areas, Ukrainian reporter says

Religious freedom no longer exists in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine, where religious leaders have been abducted and sometimes tortured, several Ukrainian journalists said during a recent visit to the United States.

“There is no religious freedom in the occupied areas. There is only the Russian Orthodox Church. Other churches have been closed, and pastors have been arrested,” said Vlasta Lazur with Radio Liberty/Radio Free Europe. “It is very dangerous to speak about religion if you’re not Russian Orthodox.”

Lazur was one of five journalists from Ukraine who recently traveled to the United States, including stops in the Dallas and Houston areas, in July.

They pointed to multiple violations of religious freedom in Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine.

Earlier this year, a Ukrainian priest in the occupied area of Kherson Oblast was kidnapped from his home by Russian forces and killed.

Lazur noted a church in Donbas was destroyed by Russian military the week before the journalists arrived in the United States.

Many churches, synagogues and mosques have been damaged by shelling. Some houses of worship have been dismantled in Russian-occupied areas.

In other occupied areas, Russian authorities have taken control of church buildings, looting them and turning them into cultural centers to spread propaganda, the visiting journalists noted.

“Russia controls the occupied areas, but they do not yet control the people,” said Zakhar Protsiuk, chief operating officer of The Kyiv Independent.

The reality in Ukraine belies the image Russian President Vladimir Putin seeks to project as a protector of traditional values and religion, Protsiuk said.

Government controls Russian Orthodox Church

After the fall of the Soviet Union, the Russian government recognized it could manipulate the Russian Orthodox church to achieve its own ends, he asserted.

“It is controlled by the state,” he said.

After Russia invaded the Crimean Penisula of Ukraine in 2014 and annexed Crimea, the government stripped away religious freedom in the region, he noted.

“There is no other religion apart from the Russian Orthodox Church,” Protsiuk said. “Russia banned all others — Protestants, the Greek Catholic Church [which follows Byzantine liturgy but recognizes the papacy], the Muslims and the Jehovah’s Witnesses. Russia sees the church as an extension of the government. It’s about advancing the control of the state.”

Leaders of banned religious groups have been arrested and deported to Russia, and Russian Orthodox Church leaders have abetted the process, said Yulia Zabielina, a journalist with New Voice.

Some religious leaders have been tortured, including instances of sexual assault and castration, she noted.

Others have been involuntarily conscripted into the military and placed on the front lines in Ukraine, where they have been forced to wage war on their own people, Protsiuk added.

Putin has used the Russian Orthodox Church as its propaganda arm to gain support for Russian aggression in Ukraine, and Patriarch Kirill of Moscow has obliged, Potsiuk said. The World Russian People’s Council — which Kirill heads — declared Russia’s military assault on Ukraine a “Holy War.”

He noted Kirill and other high-ranking Russian Orthodox Church officials previously were KGB agents, as was Putin.

The visiting journalists pointed to the July 8 bombing of Okhmatdyt National Children’s Hospital in Kyiv as evidence of Russia’s lack of concern for Ukrainian lives.

The missile attack claimed the lives of 27 civilians, including four children. Another 117 people, including seven children, were injured.

Ukrainian children deported to Russia

Yevheniia Motorevska, head of the unit at The Kyiv Independent investigating war crimes, noted about 20,000 Ukrainian children in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine have been forcibly separated from their parents and relocated to Russia.

The children and youth spend extended time at “summer camps,” where they are immersed in a uniquely Russian version of history, religion and culture — including distorted teachings about Ukraine, she noted.

“Their goal is to erase the Ukrainian identity of these kids,” she said.

Older children and youth at the camps also are “militarized,” training and conditioning them to become part of the “Russian imperial machine,” Protsiuk said.

“They teach them how to handle weapons,” he said. “They are preparing the next army for the future.”


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Ken Camp and originally published by Baptist Standard. 

Share with others:

Facebook
X/Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Latest News

  • Legal updates regarding two SBC cases
    Legal updates regarding two SBC cases
    December 4, 2025/
    0 Comments
  • Evangelist’s case goes before the Supreme Court
    Evangelist’s case goes before the Supreme Court
    December 4, 2025/
    0 Comments
  • Families file class-action suit to stop Ten Commandment displays
    Families file class-action suit to stop Ten Commandment displays
    December 4, 2025/
    0 Comments

Sign up for the Highlights

Get all latest content delivered to your email a few times a month.
Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

Related Posts

Legal updates regarding two SBC cases

Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary remains dismissed from claims of defamation in a case involving the school and its former president, Paige Patterson, with the latter

Evangelist’s case goes before the Supreme Court

Authorities arrested Gabriel Olivier in 2021 after refusing to remain in a designated protest zone in Brandon, Mississippi.

Families file class-action suit to stop Ten Commandment displays

Eighteen families filed a class-action lawsuit Dec. 2 to stop the display of a prescribed version of the Ten Commandments in all classrooms of every Texas school district not already involved in related litigation or subject to an injunction.

First person: 15 ‘surprising’ goals to set for 2026

You might be already thinking about goals for the upcoming new year even though we’re a few weeks away from 2026, and I assume that some of those goals are related to your spiritual walk.

Want to receive news highlights throughout the week? Sign up here!

Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

About

  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us
  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us

Explore

  • Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

Submissions

  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy
  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy

Subscribe

  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
The Baptist Paper
Address:
3310 Independence Dr.
Birmingham, AL 35209
Copyright © 2025 TAB Media Group
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ

Email:
news@thebaptistpaper.org

About

  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Photo Galleries
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church
  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Photo Galleries
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church

Explore

  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news

Subscribe

  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate

Log Out?

Lost your password?

Log In

Lost your password?

Log in

Become a part of our community!
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy/Terms of Use

Reset password

Recover your password
A password reset link will be e-mailed to you.
Privacy/Terms of Use
Back to
Login
×
Close Panel