Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts

Mar 22, 2023

Ukraine's Hare Krishnas survive war by Zoom and serving neighbors

Many of the estimated 15,000 Hare Krishnas who call Ukraine home have continued their daily practice and serve their neighbors, even as several temples have been damaged or destroyed and their communities scattered.

Tori Luecking
Religion News Service
March 20, 2023


(RNS) — With no time even to wash her clothes as the Russians approached Mariupol a year ago, in southern Ukraine, Kalakeli Devi Dasi fled her native city with only a small suitcase filled with her dirty laundry. She also took with her a letter she was unable to deliver to her mother before Kalakeli and her friends joined a large convoy of cars heading southwest to the city of Berdyansk.

“It was very scary and we did not know what to expect,” said Kalakeli of the escape. “We saw much destruction. I saw burnt and torn bodies. It was a terrible and frightening sight. … We kept chanting the holy names of the Lord the whole way.”

Kalakeli is one of an estimated 15,000 Hare Krishnas who call Ukraine home, many of whom have continued their daily practice and serve their neighbors, even as several of their roughly 30 ISKCON temples have been damaged or destroyed and their communities scattered.

The Hare Krishna movement, whose formal name is the International Society of Krishna Consciousness, or ISKCON, has been active in Eastern Europe since 1971, when ISKCON’s founder, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, traveled to the Soviet Union in the company of Shyamsundar Das, a close friend of Beatle George Harrison.

Prabhupada arrived in New York in 1965 from Calcutta to spread in the West faith in the Hindu deity Lord Krishna. Related to the nearly 500-year-old Krishna consciousness movement in India, ISKCON is a monotheistic tradition within Hinduism whose main spiritual text is the Bhagavad Gita. Its adherents practice vegetarianism and meditation, Bhakti yoga and public chanting of Krishna’s names, and in the U.S. it is best known for its groups of saffron-clad devotees chanting mantras in public spaces or passing out literature on the street.

Having planted the seeds of ISKCON in the U.S., Prabhupada went to the Soviet Union in 1971 to teach the faith. From there, the theology spread underground by word of mouth, despite the Communist Party’s anti-religious agenda, eventually finding its way to Ukraine.

Other Hare Krishnas from abroad followed Prabhupada to continue to nurture the movement in the former Soviet Union. One of them, Niranjana Swami, a convert to ISKCON from Massachusetts, entered the U.S.S.R. under the guise of a tourist in the late 1980s but broke away from his tour at night to lecture in small, packed apartments, teaching as many as 100 people on an evening.

“I felt these people were so sincerely looking for God, because it had been suppressed in their lives for so long by the regime, that I felt the regime actually did much to expand God consciousness,” said Niranjana Swami. “Anything beyond the party line was, to them, seen as a potential message from the divine.”

He was in Russia when the Soviet Union collapsed. “I happened to be in Moscow when Yeltsin was standing on the tanks around the parliament building.”

Now 70 and a governing body commissioner for ISKCON, Niranjana Swami oversees communities in Moldova, Belarus, Lithuania and Ukraine, traveling widely and visiting Ukraine when he can.

When the war broke out in Ukraine in 2022, local devotees turned to Niranjana Swami for support and guidance, and he began lecturing via Zoom. His collection of lectures about the war were recently compiled and published in a book titled, “Krishna Protects His Devotees.”

Niranjana Swami also helped mobilize the worldwide ISKCON community to raise thousands of dollars for those suffering from the effects of the war. Share Your Care, based in Kyiv, aims to help Hare Krishnas and their families relocate from conflict zones, supplement their loss of income and distribute food. Since the war began, an estimated 2 million plates of food have been distributed by ISKCON to Ukrainians in need.

The war has claimed the lives of at least five Hare Krishna devotees, and devastation in Kramatorsk and Bakhmut has cost the local communities its temples. In the face of this violence, deities have been relocated while larger temple rooms have been closed and their basements converted into bomb shelters.

Temple services and programs have resumed in cities in safer locales, while on the streets of Kyiv and other cities west of there, public chanting and book distribution have also resumed.

Much of this activity is overseen by Acyuta Priya, ISKCON’s zonal supervisor for Ukraine. Born to a staunchly Communist family when Ukraine was still a Soviet state, he joined the underground movement in 1980. “Of course I hated the Communist regime, because it wasn’t allowing me to dedicate my life to God,” he said.

The war has ended his normally itinerant existence; he is currently staying in a contact’s basement sauna in Chernivtsi, though he travels to various cities when possible. According to Acyuta Priya, 71 of the nearly 100 Hare Krishna community groups are still operating, serving Hare Krishnas and their neighbors. He said they continue to see new people joining the movement.

“People just come, they want to help and they have this volunteer spirit,” said Acyuta Priya. “I will tell you honestly, I am native Ukrainian, here from my birth, and I have never seen people be so united. It was unexpected for me.”

He attributes the Hare Krishnas’ resilience to their faith. “You have to understand that the Lord controls everything, and we need to see this war as an opportunity to raise up and to grow, and to grow mostly by giving and not just be in survival mode… There is a need to dedicate yourself to a higher cause, and it should be practical, not just theoretical,” said Acyuta Priya.

But some, like Kalakeli, have found homes outside the country. She moved frequently during the early weeks of the invasion, moving from Berdyansk to Zaporizhia, then to Dnipro, before finally leaving Ukraine and finding shelter with a community of fellow devotees in Denmark.

For nearly two months, Kalakeli was unable to contact or locate her mother, sister and nephews back in Mariupo

“My life became just an existence. Only ‘kirtan’ (devotional singing) dulled my pain for a while,” said Kalakeli. “Totally desperate, I began to have thoughts of going back and looking for my family.”

In April of last year, she was finally able to connect with her family via phone. They had all managed to stay safe back in Mariupol, but their home was destroyed in the war. They recently joined Kalakeli in Copenhagen.

“The war taught us a lot,” said Kalakeli. “The main thing I have learned is that no one can take God away from me. In such difficult situations, there was nothing else we could do but trust in Krishna. Love for God will end all wars. We offer it to everyone and want nothing in return.”



https://religionnews.com/2023/03/20/ukraines-hare-krishnas-survive-war-by-zoom-and-serving-neighbors/

Dec 11, 2022

FECRIS under fire: 82 prominent Ukrainian scholars ask MACRON to stop funding it

Jan Leonid Bornstein
The European Times
November 26, 2022

On November 11, 82 of the most prominent religious scholars of Ukraine, including the President of the National Academy of Science of Ukraine, and many other big names, wrote a letter to the French President Emmanuel Macron about the funding of FECRIS. FECRIS is an umbrella organization that gathers “anticult” associations all over Europe, including in Russia. It’s far decried for its discriminatory activities against new religions, and has been convicted by several courts in Europe for those. And in fact, it’s entirely funded by the French government.

The point of the letter is to raise awareness of the strong support that FECRIS has provided to its Russian members, and to the Kremlin in their outrageous propaganda against Ukraine and the West. It’s true that by funding this organization which still has members in Russia calling to hate and war against the Ukrainian depicted as “Satanists” and “cult members”, is contradictory with the political and financial support of Ukraine by the current French government. By funding FECRIS, France funds its own enemy, the enemy of Ukraine and the enemy of Europe.

Here is the full letter with signatories:

Logo UAR - FECRIS under fire: 82 prominent Ukrainian scholars ask MACRON to stop funding it


M. Emmanuel Macron
Président de la République Française
Palais de l’Élysée
75008 Paris

Kiev, November 11, 2022

Copy to:
Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine

Vadym Omeltchenko, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Ukraine to France

Etienne de PONCINS, Ambassador of France in Ukraine

Re: Funding of FECRIS association by France

Dear Mr President,

We are a group of Ukrainian scholars and human rights defenders, most of us currently based in Ukraine. We want to start this letter by saying that we deeply appreciate the help that France is providing to our country, in the most difficult situation that we are facing during these terrible times for our people.

Nevertheless, we would like to draw your attention on the following facts. At the Human Dimension Conference organized by the OSCE in Warsaw, on September 28 and 29, France has been publicly asked by NGOs to stop funding FECRIS (European Federation of Research and Information Centers on Sects and Cults), a French umbrella organization that gathers “anti-cults” organizations throughout Europe and is mainly funded by France.

What was reproached as regards FECRIS, besides its discriminatory activities against any religious minority that they falsely label as “cults”, was the fact that for years it has supported its Russian branch, whilst that branch is a key and constant actor in the Kremlin’s propaganda against Ukraine, its government and its people.

The French Permanent Representation at OSCE issued a right of reply, and instead of answering on the merits of the criticism, only stated that “FECRIS is an association providing assistance to victims of sectarian aberrations. It is as such that it is supported by the French government, which intends to continue supporting its activities”. We deeply regret that the French representation did not take seriously the facts that were denounced during this conference.

Unfortunately, the support of FECRIS to Russian propaganda against Ukraine is very well documented. It started long time ago. Alexander Dvorkin, Vice President of FECRIS from 2009 to 2021 and currently a board member, has been barred from entering Ukraine since 2014, because he was a very rabid anti-Ukrainian propagandist, spreading on Russian State TV that Ukrainian authorities were a bunch of “cult-followers” controlled by cults and the West. He was one of the first calling the Maidan authorities “Neo-Pagans” and “Nazis”. Since, he made visits to the self-proclaimed “Luhansk People’s Republic” and continued its propaganda against Ukraine there, in addition to Russia.

Alexander Novopashin, an official representative of FECRIS in Russia, is almost every day in Russian medias accusing Ukrainians to be “satanists” to be fought by the Russian troops, and even depicts us as “cannibals”, praising the Russian government for the holy fight they are conducting in our territories. He even justified publicly the Russian invasion in Ukraine with these words: “Any disease must be cured, and, alas, if a person has gangrene, you have to take away its hand, and resort to surgical methods.”

FECRIS association “the Saratov branch of the Center for Religious Studies”, located in Saratov, just after the beginning of the war, published a call to denunciate to them any “provocateur” that would pretend that Russia triggered war, or were advocating for peace, so that they could liaise with Russian law enforcement agencies to take care of them.

These are only few examples amongst dozens which have been documented.

Now, FECRIS took off their website the names of their Russian associations and are pretending that in fact they would support Ukraine. They don’t and those are false pretenses. In fact, per the last documents that they filed to the French authorities, Alexander Dvorkin is still a member of their board of administration. They never distanced themselves from the actions of their Russian members. They never publicly sanctioned Alexander Dvorkin or other Russian members for the evil acts they committed recently and during these last years. To the opposite they supported them whatever they were doing. Now they say on their website that they also have Ukrainian branches as evidence that they would not support the Kremlin propaganda. What they forgot to say, is that they have two associations members of FECRIS in Ukraine, one of them being pro-Russian, and the other one being inactive for a decade while it is well-known for its discriminatory statements against minority religions, and it never publicly distanced itself from the Russian FECRIS.

Additionally, according to reports published by Chinese official sources, as late as July 15, 2022, FECRIS’ treasurer Didier Pachoud and his FECRIS affiliate organization GEMPPI hosted in a conference in Paris Roman Silantyev, one of the Russian anti-cultists who claim that Ukrainian leaders are inspired by “occult and pagan” ideologies, and infiltrate “Satanists” into Russia for purposes of sabotage and terrorism.

That is why we respectfully ask you to make sure that France stops funding such an association which is an enemy of the West and democracy and has worked hand in hand with the Russian authorities against Ukraine. We hope that you will take this letter seriously and will consider its merits. It might look unimportant, but it’s important to realize that Vladimir Putin has now adopted FECRIS theories accusing the West of “Satanism”, and that they are part of his state propaganda apparatus.

Thank you very much for your help on this important matter.

Respectfully,

Anatoly Kolodny

President of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Chief Scientific Officer, Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy, NASU (National Academy of Science of Ukraine)

Lyudmila Filipovych
Vice-president of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Doctor of Philosophy, professor, head of the Department of Philosophy and History of Religion, Institute of Philosophy, NASU

Alexander Sagan
Vice-President of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Head of the Department of Religious Studies of the Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Petro Yarotskyi
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, leading scientist. Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy, NASU

Alla Aristova
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy, NASU

Vita Tytarenko
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy, NASU

Pavlo Pavlenko
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy, NASU

Oleg Buchma
Ph.D., Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Dmytro Bazik
Ph.D., Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Anna Kulagina
Ph.D., Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Gorkusha Oksana
Ph.D., Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Serhii Zdioruk
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, head of department Institute of Strategic Studies under the President of Ukraine

Viktor Yelenskyi
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, head of the scientific department of the Institute of Ethnopolitics of NASU

Oleksandr Utkin
Doctor of History, Prof.

Petro Mazur
Ph.D. Doctor of Medicine, director of the Kremenets Medical School

Leonid Vyhovskyi
Doctor of Philosophy, head of department of philosophy, Khmelnytskyi University of Management and Law, head of the UAR of Khmelnytskyi (Ukrainian Academy of Religious Studies)

Vitaly Dokash
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, head of UAR Chernivtsi.

Eduard Martyniuk
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Assoc. professor, ONU (Odesa National University)

Tetiana Gavrylyuk
Doctor of Philosophy, Academy of Statistics

Vitaliy Matveev
Doctor of Philosophy, head of department, University of Bioresources

Ella Bystrytska
Doctor of Science, professor, head of the department, Ternopil Volodymyr Hnatiuk National Pedagogical University

Olena Nikitchenko
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Associate Professor, Odesa Academy

Volodymyr Lubsky
Doctor of Philosophy, prof.

Tatyana Gorbachenko
Doctor of Philosophy, prof.

Ihor Kozlovsky
Ph.D. Doctor of sciences, associate professor of science, Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Lesya Skubko
Member of UARR

Iryna Fenno
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Assoc. prof. of religious studies of KNU (Kiev National University)

Iryna Klimuk
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophical Sciences

Nadia Stokolos
Dr. Doctor of History, Prof.

Olga Gold
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Assoc., Odesa

Mykhailo Murashkin
Dr. Ph.D., prof. Dnipro, Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, head of the UAR of the Dnipro Oblast

Evgeny Kononenko
Department of Religious Studies, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Oksana Vynnychenko
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, USA

Serhiy Prysukhin
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, prof. KPBA (Kyiv Orthodox Theological Academy)

Hanna Tregub
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, journalist

Ageev Vyacheslav
Co-founder of the Workshop for the Academic Study of Religion (WASR)

Alla Kiridon
Doctor of science, professor, director of VUE (the Great Ukrainian Encyclopedia, State institution)

Taras Bednarchyk
Ph.D., associate professor, Vinnytsia Medical University

Ruslana Martych
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, associate professor, KU Grinchenko (Borys Hrinchenko Kyiv University)

Oleksandr Horban
Ph.D., prof. KU Grinchenko (Borys Hrinchenko Kyiv University)

Maria Bardyn
Doctor of Philosophical Sciences, Department of Religion, Kyiv Region.

Volodymyr Verbytskyi
Doctor of Philosophy, KNU (Kiev National University)

Alyona Leshchenko
Doctor of Philosophy, prof. Kherson University

George Pankov
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Kharkiv National University

Victoria Lyubashchenko
Prof. UKU (Ukrainian Catholic University)

Dmytro Gorevoy
Director of the Center for Religious Security NGO. Head of projects and programs of the Institute of Religion and Society of the Ukrainian Catholic University.

Yaroslav Yuvsechko
Doctor of Philosophy, Associate Professor, Khmelnytskyi University

Serhiy Geraskov
Ph.D. philos., Kyiv

Ivan Mozgovyi
Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Sumy

Yury Vilkhovy
Ph.D. History, Associated professor, Poltava Pedagogical University

Olga Dobrodum
Doctor of Philosophy, professor at the University of Bioresources

Said Ismagilov
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, former mufti of the “UMMA” Council

Yury Kovalenko
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Rector of the Open Orthodox University

Roman Nazarenko
Ph.D., UKU (Ukrainian Catholic University)

Oleg Sokolovsky
Doctor of Philosophy, prof., Zhytomyr Ivan Franko State University

Oleg Yarosh
Ph.D., NASU, Kyiv

Maxim Doychik
Doctor of Philosophy, head department of philosophy of the Carpathian National University (Ivano-Frankivsk)

Yuriy Boreyko
Doctor of Philosophy, head department Eastern Europe University named after L. Ukrainki (Lutsk)

Olga Borisova
Doctor of History, Professor, Kharkiv Institute of Culture

Alexander Lakhno
Ph.D. history of sciences, vice-rector of the Poltava Pedagogical University

Larisa Vladychenko
Dr. Ph.D., prof., head Department Secretariat of the Cabinet of Ministers

Serhiy Shumylo
Doctor of History, director of the Athos Heritage Institute

Vadim Sliusar
Doctor in Politics. Prof. Zhytomyr

Vasyl Popovych
Dr. Doctor of Philosophy, professor, Zaporizhzhia

Mykola Kozlovets
Dr. Doctor of Philosophy, prof., Zhytomyr

Nadiya Volik
Doctor of History, associate professor, Ternopil Volodymyr Hnatiuk National Pedagogical University

Yulia Shabanova
Doctor of Philosophy, Prof. Head of the Department of Philosophy and Pedagogy of the National Mining University “Dniprov Polytechnic”

Pavlo Yamchuk
Doctor of Philosophy, Prof., Uman National University, University of Horticulture

Maxim Vasin
Bachelor of Laws, executive Director of the IRS (Institute of Religious Freedom)

Nadia Rusko
Ph.D. Doctor of Philosophy, Associate Professor of the Department of Social Sciences, Ivano-Frankivsk National Technical University of Oil and Gas

Andriy Tyshchenko
Doctor of Philosophy, Kharkiv

Volodymyr Popov
Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Donetsk University, Vinnytsia

Lyudmila Babenko
Doctor of History, Prof. Poltava Pedagogical University

Oleksandra Kovalenko
Kyiv, Open Orthodox University

Natalya Pavlyk
Institute of Pedagogical Education of NASU

Ruslan Khalikov, Ph.D. in religious studies, member of UARR (Ukrainian Association of Religious Studies), WASR (Workshop for the Academic Study of Religions), publisher.

Vitalii Shchepanskyi, Ph.D., in religious studies, member of WASR.

Anton Leshchynskyi, MA in religious studies, member of WASR.

Ihor Kolesnyk, PhD, assistant professor, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv

Uliana Sevastianiv, Ph. D. in religious studies, member of WASR, lecturer of the Stepan Gzhytskyi National University of Veterinary Medicine and Biotechnology of Lviv

Oleg Kyselov, Ph.D. in religious studies, member of WASRr and UARR, Senior Researcher, Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy, NASU.

Olena Mishalova, Ph.D. in social philosophy and philosophy of history, member of WASR, associate professor, Kryvyi Rih State Pedagogical University.

Olha Mukha Ph.D., in philosophy, member of WASR, Head of Educational and Informational Department of Memorial Museum “Territory of Terror”

https://www.europeantimes.news/2022/11/fecris-under-fire-82-prominent-ukrainian-scholars-ask-macron-to-stop-funding-it/

Mar 28, 2016

Pastor Sunday Adelaja Fired over Sex Scandal

March 27, 2016
ZimEye



The pastor of the 1,5 million-member famed “largest church in Europe,” Sunday Adelaja, recently exposed by ZimEye.com, has been fired from his job over a string of highly disturbing  sex scandals.

The Embassy of God Church in Ukraine’s overseer one only known as “Apostle Tuff Ulyses”, diplomatically removed him although that move has since been diplomatically labelled “Adelaja’s stepping down,” due to multiple allegations and confessions of having sex with over one hundred women in his Church. After several women came forward, Adelaja himself while at first denying committing the abuses, admitted to an undercover ZimEye.com journo to committing the sexual offences, and in the latest video recording (below) the preacher has now confessed announcing his axing.

Tens of thousands of faithful Christian families have had their faith soiled after discovering that the man they trusted all this while as their Spiritual Father, is a “sinful, serial womaniser”.

In managing the crisis, the Embassy of God church’s council of elders led by a US based Ulysses Tuff on the 24 March 2016, moved to remove Adelaja from performing any Christian ministry until further notice.
In the below 2 minute video recording, Adelaja comes out announcing he has stepped down.
“Yes I am, I want to move on. I have a lot of things going on in my life. I have a lot of things going on in the local church, so I have taken that decision to step down.” He continues,

“…and you know get ready for future that God has for me.

“But you know I will still be there for anniversary”.

Meanwhile in addition to the issues of sexual misconduct, Adelaja has a standing case of fraudulent business ventures in which he allegedly collected hundreds of thousands of dollars from church members in a scandalous pyramid scheme. That case has been in the wait for over 7 years to date.


https://www.zimeye.net/breaking-news-pastor-sunday-adelaja-fired-over-sex-scandal/