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Pope meets Russian Orthodox number two ahead of meeting with Patriarch

Reuters

Pope Francis met Bishop Anthony, the second most powerful leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, on Friday ahead of an expected summit next month with its Patriarch Kirill, who supports the war in Ukraine.

It was their first meeting since Anthony’s predecessor, Hilarion, was ousted in June in an abrupt decision indicating discord at the top of the Moscow Patriarchate over the conflict.

Vatican Pope Francis and Bishop Anthony

Pope Francis meets with the second most powerful leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, Bishop Anthony, ahead of an expected meeting next month with its Patriarch Kirill, at the Vatican, on 5th August. PICTURE: Vatican Media/­Handout via Reuters

The Vatican listed Anthony on the Pope’s official appointments but gave no details of what was discussed in the private audience. 

The Pope will attend a congress of religious leaders in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan on 13th to 15th September, where he has said he hoped to meet with Kirill.

Bulat Sarsenbayev, head of the Kazakh organisation hosting the congress, told the Astana Times that Kirill has confirmed his presence there.

A close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kirill has given enthusiastic backing to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which the patriarch views as a bulwark against a West he considers decadent.


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Kirill’s stance has caused a rift with the Vatican and unleashed an internal rebellion that has led to the severing of ties by some local Orthodox Churches with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Francis, who has called the conflict a “cruel and senseless war of aggression”, had planned to meet Kirill on 14th June in Jerusalem but cancelled on the advice of Vatican diplomats.

They have met once, in Cuba in 2016 – the first meeting between a pope and a leader of the Russian Orthodox Church since the Great Schism of 1054.

In an interview with Reuters last month, Francis said he wanted to visit the Kyiv after his return from Canada on 30th July, but also wanted to go to Moscow, preferably first, to promote peace.

Putin has described Moscow’s actions in Ukraine as a “special military operation” aimed at demilitarising and “denazifying” the country. Ukraine and the West have labelled the conflict an unprovoked Russian war of aggression.

 

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