Russian Orthodox Church fires Archpriest for ‘obstruction’ of icon transfer
Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, on Saturday, May 27, dismissed his expert on art and restoration for obstructing the transfer of a historic 15th-century Trinity icon to the Church from a Moscow museum.
Russian President Vladimir Putin had decided that the icon be handed over to the Church from Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery because of its importance to believers, the Kremlin said this week.
Archpriest Leonid Kalinin, head of the Moscow Patriarchate’s expert council on church art, architecture, and restoration, told the Interfax news agency this week that dialogue between the museum and the church was being conducted “in good faith,” after experts determined that the icon needed restoration work.
On Saturday, Patriarch Kirill decreed that Kalinin be dismissed from his post “in connection with the obstruction of bringing the icon” to Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior. Kalinin was also banned from the priesthood, according to the note published on the Russian Orthodox Church’s website.
“Seemingly, I made some mistake,” the TASS news agency quoted Kalinin as saying on Saturday.
Article continues after this advertisementREAD: Moscow-led Ukrainian Orthodox Church breaks ties with Russia
Article continues after this advertisementThe Church, whose conservatism Putin has espoused as part of his vision for Russia’s national identity, is one of the most ardent institutional supporters of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Patriarch Kirill said last year that those who died fighting in Ukraine would be purged of their sins.
Icons are stylized, often gilded religious paintings considered sacred in Eastern Orthodox Churches.
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Andrei Rublyov’s Trinity, one of the holiest and most artistically important Russian icons, is thought to have been painted to honor Saint Sergius of Radonezh in Sergiyev Posad, near Moscow. It depicts three angels who visited Abraham at the Oak of Mamre in the Book of Genesis, the first of the Bible.
The icon has been transferred several times during periods of internal strife.
In 1929, the authorities of the officially atheist communist Soviet Union put it in the Tretyakov Gallery. During World War II it was put into safe storage for a time.
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