New Latin diocese
erected
This time, no controversy
Pope John Paul II has created a new Latin-rite diocese in Ukraine. The Diocese
of Zakarpattie will replace an apostolic administration in the region, in
southwestern Ukraine, near the Hungarian border. The apostolic administrator,
Msgr. Antal Majnek, will be the first bishop.
The Vatican decision to create
four new dioceses in Russia, replacing the apostolic administrations there, drew
an extremely angry reaction from the Russian Orthodox Church. The move in
Ukraine, however, is likely to be less controversial.
Although there have been
repeated clashes between Catholic and Orthodox believers in Ukraine, the
tensions have pitted the Orthodox against Byzantine-rite Ukrainian Catholics.
Latin-rite Catholics—who account for only about 25 percent of the country’s
Catholic population—have generally not been directly involved in the
confrontations. The Latin-rite population is centered primarily in the west of
the country, where the new diocese is located. Byzantine Catholics predominate
in the eastern regions.
The Orthodox Church in Ukraine
is split among three separate competing patriarchates. Two of the three groups
have friendly relations with the Holy See. The third group, which is aligned
with the Russian Orthodox Patriarchate of Moscow, has been sharply critical of
the Catholic Church, and opposed the visit by Pope John Paul II to Ukraine in
June 2001.