Poltava Eparchy offers prayers on anniversary of mass clergy execution

2824
02 June 18:11
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The 87th anniversary of the mass execution of the Poltava clergy in the Triby tract near Poltava. Photo: Poltava Eparchy The 87th anniversary of the mass execution of the Poltava clergy in the Triby tract near Poltava. Photo: Poltava Eparchy

According to historians, since 1929 more than 400,000 residents have been repressed in the Poltava region.

On June 2, 2025, on the 87th anniversary of the mass execution of the Poltava clergy in the Triby tract near Poltava, Metropolitan Philip of Poltava and Myrhorod led the Divine Liturgy and memorial service, reports the press service of the Poltava Eparchy.

During the service at the St. Macarius Cathedral in Poltava, the metropolitan was concelebrated by the clergy of the Poltava Eparchy.

During the Liturgy, special prayers were offered for peace in Ukrainian land.

At the end of the service, the clergy, led by the bishop, performed a memorial litany.

After the services, the hierarch and the priests of the eparchy went to the Triby tract near Poltava, where they served a memorial service for all those executed for the faith of Christ during Soviet times.

Metropolitan Philip addressed the clergy and laity with words of guidance, thanked them for their joint prayer, and blessed everyone.

The authorities repressed Ukrainian intelligentsia, clergy, and so-called unreliable individuals. People were deprived of voting rights, "dekulakized" (refers to the Soviet policy of "dekulakization", which was the forced elimination of kulaks, wealthier peasants, as a class) and then simply exterminated. Later, the repressions spread to broader segments of the population. Even party workers and NKVD officers became victims. The Poltava region is one of the most affected by Stalin's totalitarian regime policies. According to historians, starting from 1929, more than 400,000 residents were repressed in the Poltava region.

The memorial sign for the victims of repression in the Triby tract is the only one in Poltava. It was erected in 1995 after, in the early 90s, during excavations in a nearby quarry, human remains were found. Experts and scientists established that these people were executed. The authorities decided to bury the bodies in one place and erect a memorial sign for the victims of the 1930s repressions.

As reported by the UOJ, the foundation of a church destroyed by the Bolsheviks was accidentally found in Poltava.

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