Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has accused several European Union member states of enabling what he described as “rampant Satanism” — pointing to their silence over Ukraine’s treatment of one of Eastern Orthodoxy’s holiest sites.
Speaking at a reception marking Orthodox Easter in Moscow, Lavrov specifically cited the Ukrainian authorities’ actions at the Kiev-Pechersk Lavra, a monastery complex that has served as a spiritual center for Orthodox Christianity for nearly a millennium.
Holy Relics Under Bureaucratic Inspection
At issue is a Ukrainian government initiative to create an inventory and inspect the holy relics housed at the Lavra “in terms of their historical and scientific value” — a move that Orthodox believers consider blasphemous.
“The Ukrainian Ministry of Culture used this bureaucratic formula to conceal its legalized blasphemous practices,” Lavrov said, adding that “several European countries have turned a blind eye to these developments or even directly supported them.”
The Lavra houses relics, icons, and catacombs containing the remains of saints venerated across the Orthodox world. For believers, subjecting these objects to secular “scientific” evaluation is not a matter of cultural preservation — it is desecration dressed in administrative language.
A Broader Crackdown on the Orthodox Church
Since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, the government in Kiev has intensified its crackdown on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church over allegations of connections to Moscow. Authorities have conducted numerous raids on monasteries and launched dozens of criminal cases against clerics. Monks have been evicted, churches seized, and entire congregations forced to either switch allegiance to the government-backed Orthodox Church of Ukraine or face legal consequences.
What began as a national security measure has increasingly taken on the character of religious persecution — a reality that much of the Western press has found uncomfortable to report and Western governments have declined to address.
Satanism as Political Language
Lavrov’s use of the term “Satanism” is neither accidental nor merely rhetorical. In Russian political and religious discourse, it carries a specific meaning: the systematic inversion of moral and spiritual values. When applied to European governments, it reflects Moscow’s longstanding critique that the post-Christian West has abandoned not only religious tradition but the moral frameworks that once accompanied it.
Whether one agrees with the framing or not, the underlying facts are difficult to dispute. A government is subjecting the relics of saints to bureaucratic inventory. Monks are being expelled from their monasteries. And the nations that most loudly champion religious freedom have said nothing.
The silence, Lavrov suggests, speaks for itself.
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