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EN
The elimination of religion was a fundamental ideological goal of the communist state. According to Marxist theory, religion was a product of material conditions. Working from this premise, militant atheism initially considered that religion would disappear on its own through the coming of the new society system. After the revolution the Bolsheviks started a massive persecution. When it became clear that religion was not dying out on its own, the USSR began general antireligious campaigns. One of the lesser known campaigns was confiscation of saints’ relics, carefully preserved for the purposes of veneration or as a touchable or tangible memorial.
EN
The article deals with the church and religious life of Ukrainians in the context of national and political processes during the 1960s and 1970s. The author characterizes the anti-religious policy of the Soviet government, shows its directions, forms, and methods, studies the attitude of Ukraine’s title nation representatives to religious persecution and to manipulation of religious consciousness by the communist leadership, and highlights comprehensive atheistic activities and the elimination of the ways for reviving religiosity among people. The author reveals the essence, the process of creating and artificially enforcing the new Soviet ritualism in Ukrainians’ lives. This ritualism has become a convenient tool for popularizing communist ideology in the Ukrainian SSR, destroying historical memory and undermining the national identity of the Ukrainian people. The new Soviet ritualism was also a means for implementing the policy of denationalizing Ukrainians, beginning with the age-old religious oppression of Ukrainian customs, traditions, and rituals. The model of state-church policy of the Soviet power in the described period was based on the use of a variety of forms and methods of struggle against religion, including: a comprehensive control over clergy activities, destruction of religious sites and sacred objects, as well as administrative, moral, and political pressure on believers. Displacing religion, the Soviet totalitarian state destroyed not only native religious customs of the Ukrainian people, but also violated the principles of the centuries-old traditional culture and undermined the national fortitude of Ukrainians.
EN
In the article we studied the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church as an integral part, a national factor in the religious process of the Ukrainians, living in western regions of the USSR during the 1960s and 1970s. The research gave a comprehensive analysis of the place and role of the church in nation-building and preservation of ethnic and national identity of the titular representatives of the Ukraine’s nation during the Soviet anti-religious campaign. We described the activities of the Greek Catholic clergy, whose aim was the consolidation of national-patriotic forces and the formation of religious opposition among the Ukrainians. The article also outlined the policy vectors of the atheistic communist ruling elite and revealed their essence, covered violent reorientation of Greek Catholics to Orthodoxy. In terms of religious oppression and persecution, the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church continued its development of underground and become a consolidating factor in Western Ukrainian struggle for their national and religious rights. It has become an important factor in ethnicity creation and a spiritual and cultural self of the Ukrainian people.
EN
This article is an attempt to present the religious life of Latin-rite Catholics in Ukraine in the years 1953–1964 as well as to present the policy of the Soviet authorities towards the Roman Catholic Church. The structure of the publication consists of five chapters. The first chapter presents the situation of the Latin Church in Ukraine against the background of the socio-political changes in the Soviet state that followed the death of Joseph Stalin. The second chapter presents the specificity of pastoral work in Soviet Ukraine. The third chapter presents the participation of the faithful in the sacramental life. The fourth chapter is devoted to one of the most important forms of the prayer life of Catholics in the USSR, which was „liturgies without a priest”. The last, fifth chapter presents the activities of secular associations, which in turn, despite numerous restrictions by the state authorities, have had a significant impact on the preservation of identity and religious practices and the transfer of the link of faith to younger generations.
PL
Niniejszy artykuł jest próbą ukazania życia religijnego katolików obrządku łacińskiego na Ukrainie w latach 1953–1964, a także przedstawienia polityki władz sowieckich wobec Kościoła rzymskokatolickiego. Na strukturę publikacji składa się pięć rozdziałów. W pierwszym rozdziale została przedstawiona sytuacja Kościoła łacińskiego na Ukrainie na tle zmian społeczno-politycznych w państwie sowieckim, które nastąpiły po śmierci Józefa Stalina. W rozdziale drugim ukazano specyfikę pracy duszpasterskiej na sowieckiej Ukrainie. Trzeci rozdział prezentuje udział wiernych w życiu sakramentalnym. Rozdział czwarty poświęcony został jednej z najważniejszych form życia modlitewnego katolików w ZSRS, jaką były tzw. liturgie bez kapłana. W ostatnim, piątym rozdziale przedstawiono działalność stowarzyszeń świeckich, które z kolei mimo rozlicznych restrykcji ze strony władz państwowych usiłowały wywrzeć znaczący wpływ na zachowanie tożsamości i praktyk religijnych oraz przekazanie ogniwa wiary młodszym pokoleniom.
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