Death and funeral of Patriarch Volodymyr of Kyiv
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50°27′10.8″N 30°30′55.39″E / 50.453000°N 30.5153861°E
| Death and funeral of Patriarch Volodymyr of Kyiv | |||
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Grave of the patriarch near the bell tower of St. Sophia Cathedral | |||
| Date | 18 July 1995 | ||
| Location | Sophia Square, Kyiv, Ukraine 50°27′10.8″N 30°30′55.39″E / 50.453000°N 30.5153861°E | ||
| Goals | Burial of Volodymyr Romaniuk in Saint Sophia Cathedral | ||
| Concessions | Romaniuk buried in Sophia Square | ||
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2nd Prime Minister of Ukraine (government)
2nd President of Ukraine
First term (1994–1999)
Second term (1999–2004)
Post-presidency
Controversies and protests
Governments
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Patriarch Volodymyr Romaniuk of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate died on 14 July 1995. His funeral subsequently turned into a riot, popularly known as Black Tuesday (Ukrainian: чорний вівторок, romanized: chornyi vivtorok), after members of the Berkut special police force attempted to prevent mourners from accessing Kyiv's St. Sophia Cathedral, with members of the far-right Ukrainian People's Self-Defence attacking members of the security forces. It was the first incident of police attacking a peaceful gathering in Ukraine since 1991.[2]
Volodymyr Romaniuk was patriarch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate from its founding until his death on 14 July 1995.[3] Prior to that, he had been a bishop of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church, and before that a political prisoner associated with the Ukrainian Helsinki Group.[4] The establishment of the UOC–KP, an autocephalous (albeit unrecognised) Eastern Orthodox church in Ukraine, was a significant source of national pride for Ukrainians following independence, though it was significantly outnumbered by the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) in terms of believers and parishes.[3]
Following the former's establishment, the UOC–KP and UOC (MP) had been involved in a bitter struggle over control of Ukraine's dominant religious sites. The struggle soon came to involve the political scene; President Leonid Kravchuk was a supporter of the UOC–KP, while Prime Minister and later President Leonid Kuchma backed the UOC(MP). Kravchuk initially promised Kyiv's Saint Sophia Cathedral to the UOC–KP, but following Kuchma's 1994 election as president, these plans fell through.[5]
The exact circumstances of Romaniuk's death are unclear and a matter of some dispute; officially ruled as a heart attack, several Ukrainian nationalists, among them politician Roman Zvarych, have claimed that the circumstances of Romaniuk's death were violent, contrary to autopsy reports.[6]