Russia marks its adoption of Christianity with new public holiday

The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix – July 29, 2010
Russia marks Christianity
Reuters

Russia marked its adoption of Christianity in 988 on Wednesday with a new public holiday, the latest show of Kremlin support for an Orthodox Church that has grown increasingly powerful since the fall of Communism.

Rights groups have criticized the new holiday, approved by President Dmitry Medvedev, as undermining Russia’s secular constitution and members of the country’s large Muslim minority have complained that it excludes them.

Marking the anniversary Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, held a liturgy in Kyiv, the capital of modern Ukraine and medieval Kyivan Rus, whose leader Prince Vladimir made Christianity the state religion more than 1,000 years ago. Kyivan Rus is seen as the precursor of modern-day Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. “Facing aggressive atheism and resurgent paganism we remain firm in our belief in God,” Kirill, clad in a flowing gold cloak, told thousands of followers in Kiev’s historic Pecherska Lavra monastery.

The Orthodox Church has undergone a revival since the fall of the Soviet Union almost 20 years ago ended decades of repression under Communism, and Russia’s leaders have endorsed it as the country’s main faith.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Russia’s adoption of Christianity had brought it closer to Europe. “This was an event of colossal significance. … Russia made a historical choice,” he said after lighting a candle in Veliky Novgorod’s Saint Sophia Cathedral, considered Russia’s oldest.

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