The chairman of the capital Andrei Sheptitsky was returned to Lviv from Kursk.
In the metropolitan chamber of the Ukrainian Greek -Catholic Church, this chair was transferred to the Ukrainian military. This is in the late 80s of the twentieth century. In the Kursk region of the Russian Federation, the export is bishop of the Republic of Kazakhstan. On March 26, Radio Liberty said that with reference to the senior pastor of the Christian Evangelical Church in the LVIV Valery Marchenko.
Once I was called a sergeant from LVIV and told me that the soldiers liberated the territory and found a chair, ”he said.
According to Markenko, in the late 1980s, the capital of the Russian Orthodox Church, Nicodemus Rusnak, stole this chair from Lviv and moved to Russia. Then he died. Subsequently, the chair turned out to be a restorer. He was offered 5,000 euros for him, but he refused to sell him.
And when the Ukrainian military came, he told them that he wanted to return this chair, ”said the pastor.
The chairman, who was previously in the cathedral or in the capital’s cells, was transferred today by the capital Igor Vozniak in LVIV UGCC.
It is known that Andrei Sheptitsky is a Ukrainian religious and public figure, the capital from the Ukrainian Greek -Catholic Church. He headed the church in the first half of the twentieth century. And actively supported the development of education, culture and medicine.
In 2023, we will recall that after the UOC-MP monks left the territory of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra National Reserve, a number of icons disappeared. Representatives of the Moscow Patriarchate said that they plan to remove everything except relics from the reserve, because they consider all property, including icons, the property of their church.
Source: Radio Liberty
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.