themoscowtimes.com 
<https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2022/06/17/why-did-hungarys-viktor-orban-support-russias-patriarch-kirill-a78035>
  


Why Did Hungary's Viktor Orban Support Russia's Patriarch Kirill? - The Moscow 
Times


Daniela Kalkandjieva

9-11 minutes

  _____  

On June 3, the European Union reached an agreement on the sixth package of 
sanctions against Russia after difficult talks with Hungary. To avoid its veto, 
the other member states had to remove the name of the Moscow patriarch from the 
EU’s blacklist. Why does the prime minister of a non-Orthodox state so 
fervently support to head of the Russian Orthodox Church, the main ally of 
Putin in the war against Ukraine?

Some observers search for the answer in the conservative mindsets of Viktor 
Orban and Patriarch Kirill, who endorse traditional values 
<http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/5925864.html> . The present partnership 
between the Hungarian state and the Moscow Patriarchate, however, also has 
historical roots. A lesser known page of their history is the Kremlin’s project 
for establishing an autocephalous Hungarian Orthodox Church after the Second 
World War. The initial idea of a unified Hungarian Orthodox Church belongs to 
Horthy’s regime. As an ally of Nazi Germany, it established control over areas 
with a significant Orthodox population and considered that a unified church 
institution would facilitate its administration.

Despite the political change after the fall of Nazi Germany, the postwar 
Hungarian state did not give up the idea of a local Orthodox Church. The major 
obstacle to this plan was the specific composition of the Orthodox minority in 
Hungary. Only a small number of its members were ethnic Hungarians. Meanwhile, 
the majority of the Orthodox believers had settled in the country as refugees 
from the Ottoman Empire and Bolshevik Russia. As a result, the Orthodox 
minority consisted of different ethnic groups belonging to five different 
jurisdictions: the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the Serbian 
Patriarchate, the Romanian Patriarchate, the Bulgarian Exarchate, and the 
Russian Orthodox Church Abroad. When the Red Army occupied Hungary, however, 
the last one was not able to administrate its parishes because it was treated 
as Hitler’s ally by the Soviets.  

In 1946, the Kremlin showed an interest in this Orthodox minority. As in other 
countries under the Red Army’s control, officially the initiative came from a 
local Orthodox priest, who appealed to the Moscow Patriarchate to take care of 
his co-believers. According to Russian archival sources, the Ministry of 
Education and Religious Denominations in Budapest supported the spread of 
Moscow’s jurisdiction over the territory of Hungary. This act had to be 
guaranteed by a concordat between the Russian patriarchate and the Hungarian 
state. In a distant future, the plan presumed the possibility of granting 
autocephaly to the Hungarian Orthodox Church.

For this purpose, in August 1946, a Russian church delegation, led by Bishop 
Nestor of Mukachevo and Uzhgorod, arrived in Budapest. It had to place the 
local Orthodox Russian émigrés with the Moscow Patriarchate and investigate the 
situation with the other Orthodox parishes. In final terms, the Russians 
concluded that there was no Hungarian Orthodox ecclesiastic suitable for the 
office of bishop. Therefore, the Hungarian government referred to the Kremlin 
with a request for a bishop from the Soviet Union. Moscow and Budapest agreed 
that the Russian bishop would be appointed as a temporary leader of the 
Hungarian Orthodox Church. It was also decided that a Hungarian church 
delegation would pay a visit to Patriarch Alexii in order to discuss the 
respective details. The multi-jurisdictional structure of the Orthodox 
communities in Hungary, however, created serious obstacles. For this reason, on 
21 October 1946, the Russian Holy Synod decided to take under Moscow’s 
jurisdiction only the Russian and Hungarian parishes, while leaving open the 
question about the Orthodox Serbians, Romanians, Bulgarians, and Greeks.

At the same time, the Ecumenical Patriarchate opposed the plan for the 
establishment of a Hungarian Orthodox Church. In December 1946, Archimandrite 
Ilarion (Vasdekas), who was in charge of the Greek parishes in Hungary, wrote 
to a churchman from the Moscow Patriarchate that “the Hungarian Church, if it 
is possible to call it so, has been under the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of 
Constantinople since the seventh century, who, according to the contemporary 
chronographers, sent a church mission to this country.”

Ilarion also underlined that though, at a later stage, the Hungarian lands fell 
under the control of the Roman popes, the Ecumenical Patriarch had never given 
up his rights over them. Still, the Greek archimandrite suggested that the 
Hungarian church question could be solved by the joint efforts of the 
patriarchates of Constantinople and Moscow. Their solution, however, had to 
respect the canonical rights of the Patriarch of Constantinople, who as a 
Bishop of New Rome had the privilege of setting up new autocephalous churches 
situated outside the territories of the existing Orthodox autocephalous 
churches. It also had to recognize the role of the Patriarchate of 
Constantinople as the mother church of the Hungarian one.

In this regard, Ilarion commented that the rights of the Russian Orthodox 
Church in this particular situation stemmed from the Soviet military control 
over Hungary, which allowed this particular religious institution to provide 
care for the local Orthodox population. The appointment of the future leader of 
a Hungarian Orthodox Church, however, had to be arranged by the patriarchates 
of Constantinople and Moscow. In this respect, Ilarion suggested his own 
appointment to this position and mentioned that the Ecumenical Patriarch would 
support it. In their turn, the Serbian and the Romanian patriarchates also 
opposed the plan for a Hungarian Orthodox Church and appealed to the Russian 
church leadership to stop it.

Despite this resistance, the Hungarian government continued with preparations. 
In April 1947, it asked Patriarch Alexii to consecrate Janos Varju as Bishop of 
the Hungarian Orthodox Church and to include him in the Holy Synod in Moscow. 
In this way, the new church was to receive a status similar to that of the 
Czechoslovakian Orthodox Church. The head of the Russian Church did not decline 
the proposal but required the Hungarian government to negotiate the 
establishment of the new church with Romania and Yugoslavia and to take into 
account the opinion of the Romanian and Serbian parishes in Hungary.

As a result, the project for a Hungarian Orthodox Church was halted. The Soviet 
state leadership did not give green light to its forceful realization because 
it would antagonize the Serbian and Romanian churches and draw them closer to 
the Patriarchate of Constantinople at a moment when the Kremlin was preparing 
the convocation of an ecumenical council in Moscow, scheduled for the autumn of 
1947. It was expected to transfer the ecumenical title of the Patriarch of 
Constantinople to his Russian peer. Meanwhile, the Cold War and Tito’s revolt 
against Stalin changed the geopolitical situation. The rift between Yugoslavia 
and the Soviet Union excluded the Serbian Orthodox Church from the orbit of the 
Moscow Patriarchate. The plan for an autocephalous Hungarian Orthodox Church 
has been shelved for many years.

In the present geopolitical situation, however, the Kremlin could take 
advantage of its reviving. On the one hand, since the recognition of Ukrainian 
autocephaly by the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Moscow church leadership is 
looking for revanche in various places on the globe. From this perspective, the 
creation of an autocephalous Orthodox Church in the lands of Medieval Panonia 
would change the balance in the Orthodox world.

In particular, as a lieu de mémoire for the Slavic nations praising Sts Cyril 
and Methodius as the creators of their alphabet, liturgy, and culture, the 
establishment of a Hungarian Orthodox Church would become a highly sensitive 
issue. At the same time, the Russian state and church authorities might employ 
the situation for diminishing the symbolic value of the 1980 declaration of the 
two holy brothers as Patrons of Europe by Pope John Paul II, famous for his 
struggle against communism. In his turn, Orban also could use the new church as 
a means of suppressing the liberal voices in the local Catholic and Protestant 
churches.

On the other hand, even if the Hungarian autocephaly project remains only on 
paper, the Moscow patriarchate could use it for exerting pressure on those 
Orthodox churches that have structures in Hungary. Especially sensitive would 
be the Serbian Patriarchate that has just agreed to give up its jurisdiction on 
the Orthodox Church in the Republic of North Macedonia. As in the late 1940s, 
these churches would protest without being able to unite against the Moscow 
Patriarchate and Orban’s government.

In short, the issue of Hungarian autocephaly, realized or not, has the 
potential to provoke religious, political, and social conflicts in Southeastern 
and Central Europe that might weaken the unity of the European Union and NATO.  
   

This article was originally published in Public Orthodoxy 
<https://publicorthodoxy.org/2022/06/14/why-did-viktor-orban-block-the-eus-sanctions-against-patriarch-kirill-of-moscow/>
 . 

The views expressed in opinion pieces do not necessarily reflect the position 
of The Moscow Times. 


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