Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia: The Russian Church, which has several dioceses, hundreds of parishes and millions of believers on the territory of the European Union, is taking an active part in the creation of the new face of our continent. It is the task of our Church to remind Europe of its Christian roots, to resist the attack of aggressive secularism, and to defend traditional values. An active role in the realization of this noble task is fulfilled by the Representation of the Moscow Patriarchate to the European Institutions. May 17, 2008
Russian Orthodox Church representation to the European Institutions
Russian Orthodox Church
Representation to the European Institutions


Eglise Orthodoxe Russe
Représentation près les Institutions Européennes
Russian Orthodox Church representation to the European Institutions


  Events

President Vladimir Putin Visits the Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Vienna
Russian President V. Putin visits
Orthodox Cathedral in Vienna

Russian President Visits Hungarian Orthodox Cathedral
Russian President V. Putin visits
Hungarian Orthodox Cathedral

Visit of Her Majesty Queen Paola of Belgium to the Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church to the European Institutions
Queen Paola of the Belgians
visited Church Representation
in Brussels

European Commission President J.M.Barroso and Austrian Chancellor W.Schussel Meet with Religious Leaders
European Commission
President J.M.Barroso
and Austrian Chancellor
W.Schussel Meet with
Religious Leaders

The Prime Minister of the Russian Federation M. E. Fradkov Visits the Cathedral of the Dormition of the Mother of God in Budapest
Russian Prime Minister
M.Fradkov visited
Hungarian Orthodox Cathedral
  
The Prime Minister of the Russian Federation M. M. Kasyanov Visited the Cathedral of the Dormition of the Mother of God in Budapest
Russian Prime Minister
M.Kasyanov visited
Hungarian Orthodox Cathedral
   
Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Visited the Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church to the European Institutions
Russian Foreign Minister
visited Church Representation
in Brussels


Russian Foreign Minister Visited Hungarian Orthodox Cathedral
Russian Foreign Minister
visited Hungarian
Orthodox Cathedral

Austrian Parliament President visited Orthodox Cathedral in Vienna
Austrian Parliament President
visited Orthodox Cathedral
in Vienna

  

The Archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, visited the St Nicholas Cathedral in Vienna
Cardinal Christoph Schönborn
visited Russian Orthodox
Cathedral in Vienna
 

The Primate of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland Visited the Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church to the European Institutions
Archbishop of Finland visited
Church Representation
in Brussels
 

Consecration of the Patriarchal Church of the Holy Trinity and Premises of the Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church to the European Institutions in Brussels
Consecration of the
Holy Trinity Church in Brussels

Archbishop of Salzburg visited Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Vienna
Archbishop of Salzburg
visited Russian Orthodox
Cathedral in Vienna

Metropolitan Kirill visited Hungary
Metropolitan Kirill
visited Hungary

Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad Visits the Diocese of Vienna and Austria
Metropolitan Kirill 
visited Austria

 
  News archive
  

  Home » Church and Society

Printer friendly version

Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad: The world community should stop the suffering of the Serbs in Kosovo

Speech at the meeting of the European Council of Religious Leaders and Religious Leaders of Kosovo, Leuven (Belgium), 8 November 2004

Esteemed members of the European Council of Religious Leaders and religious leaders of Kosovo! Dear speakers – representatives of Norway, the European Union and NATO! Dear brothers and sisters!

I greet the participants of the meeting, at which we shall listen to the representatives of states and international organizations dealing with the problems of the Balkans and of Kosovo in particular.

First of all I would like to thank all those who work for the establishment of peace in the Balkans. The contradictions, which are rooted in the distant past, have become worse in the region and led to wars and conflicts in the recent years. There is no great bloodshed in the Balkans at present, and great service to this situation was rendered by many states and international organizations. However, it were the Balkan nations themselves who ‘guided their feet into the way of peace’ largely thanks to the preaching of the religious leaders who have called people to peace and tried to stop violence.

Having said this, I cannot help drawing your attention to the tragic and alarming aspects of the situation. Unfortunately, peace in the Balkans, and in Kosovo in particular, is neither complete, nor just. Many people are dying or are being expelled from their land, the ancient holy places are barbarously destroyed, and the return of the considerable number of refugees is still out of the question.

An attempt to justify the foreign military intervention was reduced to the idea of the defense of a national minority. We were promised an ethnical peace and multicultural society under the control of the international military contingent with the assistance of international civil personal. Yet, people still suffer – this time the Serbian population of Kosovo.

As a result, a wall of mutual distrust between the Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo has grown to inconceivable dimensions, while the responsible persons do not try to radically change the situation.

The present relations among people in Kosovo show that the world community actually recognizes ‘the right of the might’ and cannot do anything to restore justice. It is not fortuitous that we hear the appeals to radical division of the territories, where the Serbs and Albanians reside. The rigid ethno-territorial division becomes the outcome of conflicts both in the Balkans in general, including Bosnia, and in the regions of the Middle East and the Armenian-Azerbaijanian conflicts, as well as in some African countries.

We hear about the ability of the world community to settle conflicts by bringing people to peaceful coexistence, However, practice shows that the establishment of the monoethnic territories, divided by frontiers and walls, sometimes gives real guaranties of security.

Moreover, the most powerful countries of the word de facto recognize military victories of one party in a conflict, and sometimes assist the achievement of these victories. All this puts into serious doubt the existing standards of law, the very principle of justice, and the idea of building a multicultural society. Some people even say that this idea failed. Yet we cannot and should not turn down the ideals of justice and lawfulness by making world politics a domain of the ‘right of the might’.

The situation in Kosovo should become a litmus paper by which the world will see whether we are ready to implement the best moral ideals, or whether humanity is receding into the law of the jungle.

The world community should stop the suffering of the Serbs in Kosovo as well as of any other nation. May I express my hope that we, politicians, international and religious leaders, will be able to bring about a lasting peace in this region through our common work, as the way of injustice, hatred and violence will never lead to any real settlement of the conflict.


Representation of the Russian Orthodox Church to the European Institutions

35 rue Léon Lepage, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgique
Tel: +32-484-904-038
Tel/fax: +32-2-219-62-86

Top


Contact us  -  Newsletter subscription  -  Русская версия

Powered by iCMS-x web content management solution, © Interpressfact 2007 All rights reserved