Russia & Former Soviet Union

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Estonian officials have threatened to shut down monasteries if they don’t cut ties with Russia

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

File Photo. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Tallinn, Estonia. © Getty Images / Slawek Staszczuk/Loop Images/Universal Images Group

The Estonian Orthodox Church (EOC) will change its name in response to the pressure from the authorities to sever its historical ties with Russia.

The announcement comes after the Estonian government approved draft legislation requiring religious organizations to cut ties with foreign leaders and entities whose actions could be deemed a threat to national security. “There should be no connection to entities that support military aggression,” Interior Minister Lauri Laanemets said on Thursday.

The EOC is a self-governing church that has maintained canonical ties to the Russian Orthodox Church. In a statement on Friday, EOC said that it will change its name to the Estonian Christian Orthodox Church.

“The government-approved bill violates the freedom of religion and is directed against our church,” Bishop Daniel of Tartu said, adding that, if made into law, the legislation could “significantly restrict the activities of our church.”

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

READ MORE: EU state moves forward with Ukraine-style church crackdown

He argued that the new name would “further highlight the church’s local identity and demonstrate that we are acting in accordance with the law and, at the same time, we are respecting the church canons.”

Most Estonians are not religious. Around 16% of the population are Orthodox Christians, and 8% are Lutherans, according to the government statistics. Estonia was part of the Soviet Union from 1940 to 1991. Around 27% of the country’s population are Russian-speakers.

Earlier this week, Laanemets branded EOC “the most important instrument of influence for Russia and the Kremlin in Estonia.”

Last year, the minister threatened to shut down monasteries that refuse to cut ties with the Moscow Patriarchate and even threatened to classify the Russian Orthodox Church as a terrorist organization.

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Christian church to change name in bid to fight off EU state’s crackdown

Read more UN slams Ukraine’s crackdown on Orthodox church

Moscow Patriarchate spokesman Vladimir Legoyda has slammed Laanemets’ comments as a “witch hunt,” suggesting that the Estonian government was using the crackdown on the church to distract the taxpayers from “real issues.”

In August 2024, the EOC revised its charter and removed the mention of the Moscow Patriarchate from its official name, although Laanemets has insisted that the measure was insufficient.

EU officials have criticized the Russian Orthodox Church for its support of the Russian troops in Ukraine. In 2022, the UK imposed sanctions on the church’s head, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow.

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