
PHILADELPHIA (OSV News): “God is near. We stand because millions of people around the world, people like you, pray for us and support us. They believe that goodness and truth have their own divine power and evil, lies and death will never have a final word,” said Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, the patriarchal head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church [UGCC], speaking during a February 16 prayer service at the Cathedral Basilica of Ss. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia, on the second day of a February 15-21 Jubilee Year pastoral visit to the United States.
The major archbishop’s multifaceted pastoral visit—which saw him in almost round-the-clock events in Philadelphia and Washington—aimed to “bring healing and hope to our community,” according to the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia.
While the universal Church is observing a Jubilee Year dedicated to hope, Ukraine is marking the third anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion just as the administration of president, Donald Trump, has suspended foreign assistance, made demands that it cede mineral rights to cover costs of previous aid, and bypassed the country to engage in direct ceasefire talks with Russia.
Major Archbishop Shevchuk’s visit to the US also coincided with Donald Trump accusing Ukraine of “starting” the war and calling Ukraine’s democratically-elected president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a “dictator “— even though Ukraine’s constitution prohibits holding an election during times of martial law.
God is near. We stand because millions of people around the world, people like you, pray for us and support us. They believe that goodness and truth have their own divine power and evil, lies and death will never have a final word
Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk
Major Archbishop Shevchuk’s visit began with a February 15-16 spiritual renewal programme hosted by the archeparchy at its Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Philadelphia.
The two-day gathering drew hundreds for prayer, reflections, speakers, fellowship and catechesis, as well as a Divine Liturgy presided over by Major Archbishop Shevchuk and joined by other Ukrainian Greek Catholic bishops. Their Latin Church counterpart, Archbishop Nelson Pérez of Philadelphia, hosted them for a February 16 prayer service at the city’s Cathedral Basilica of Ss. Peter and Paul.
At the prayer service, Major Archbishop Shevchuk, who leads the Archeparchy of Kyiv-Halych, Ukraine, described the full-scale invasion by Russia as “three years of death and destruction, struggle and suffering, tears and sweat; three harsh winters, three scorching summers,” with “power outages and blackouts, strikes on civilians, attacks on infrastructure.”
The major archbishop said, “Our people, our cities, our land bear deep wounds. Each time I return from my travels, I witness with sorrow that something else has gone: another building … another scar on the body of my beloved Ukraine.”
Major Archbishop Shevchuk then travelled to Washington for the second part of his pastoral visit, where he delivered a February 18 lecture at the Catholic University of America and led a prayer service for peace at the nearby Ukrainian Catholic National Shrine of the Holy Family.
[the Russian invasion has been] three years of death and destruction, struggle and suffering, tears and sweat; three harsh winters, three scorching summers Major Archbishop Shevchuk
On February 20, he inaugurated the St. Gabriel’s Institute, a partnership between the Lviv-based Ukrainian Catholic University and the UGCC to promote Church diplomacy, with 11 students now completing an internship at St. Josaphat Seminary in Washington.
Later that same day, he gave a talk at the Hudson Institute—a Washington-based think tank focusing on security and economic policy—on a just peace in Ukraine, with particular emphasis on Russia’s religious persecution in occupied areas, and Moscow’s abuse of Orthodox Christianity to promote aggression against Ukraine.
Throughout his pastoral visit—in a sit-down interview with OSV News, in his homilies and in his talks—Major Archbishop Shevchuk underscored the need for a just peace in Ukraine that addressed the root causes of Russia’s aggression.
That aggression—which has been declared a genocide in two joint reports from the New Lines Institute and the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights—continues attacks launched in 2014, a point that the major archbishop stressed throughout his visit.
“Every Ukrainian longs for peace, for nights without air raid sirens, for mornings without explosions, for days without casualties, and nights without fear,” he said, speaking in Philadelphia. “But a ceasefire is not peace. … A truce that leaves people suffering under occupation is a cruel mockery. Without justice, peace is impossible.”
But a ceasefire is not peace. … A truce that leaves people suffering under occupation is a cruel mockery. Without justice, peace is impossible
Major Archbishop Shevchuk
He also emphasised that Russia’s invasion—marked by mass killings of civilians, the forcible transfer of more than 19,500 Ukrainian children, sexual violence and the execution of Ukrainian prisoners of war—continues 20th-century Russian aggression against Ukraine. He also recalled the Soviet persecution of the UGCC, with the visible structures of the church “liquidated” and faithful forced to practice in secret until 1989.
“History has shown that every time Russia occupies Ukraine, our Church faces persecution and attempts at eradication,” he said, adding, “Today is no exception,” pointing out that the Ukrainian Catholic Church “has been declared illegal in the territories of Eastern Ukraine that are temporarily occupied by Russia.”
Major Archbishop Shevchuk, who grew up in the underground UGCC, said his Church’s security services had informed him he was among those on a “kill list” discovered in the invasion’s early days.
“I am still on that list,” he added. “And yet, by God’s grace, after three years, I stand here with you. … And Ukraine is still standing. Ukraine is still fighting. Ukraine is still praying.”
Visibly moved at a number of points in his visit, Major Archbishop Shevchuk said that “solidarity keeps us standing.”
He also emphasised that Russia’s invasion—marked by mass killings of civilians, the forcible transfer of more than 19,500 Ukrainian children, sexual violence and the execution of Ukrainian prisoners of war—continues 20th-century Russian aggression against Ukraine
He said, “Your support empowers me to wipe away the tears of widows and orphans who have lost their loving mothers—to find the right words for our wounded soldiers and to console those whose homes and lives have been shattered. We draw our strength from you, your prayers, your generosity, your presence. … I am deeply grateful for your love, your compassion and your charity.”
During his lecture at The Catholic University of America, he said that “in Ukraine, hope has different faces.”
The major archbishop related, “Living in Kyiv … I observe the birth of a new culture, a culture of profound sacrifice and ultimate generosity, a culture of hope, which is deeply rooted in the gospel—even though people professing it sometimes would call themselves agnostics, and don’t have a clear notion of God.”
He said that the concrete experience of rebuilding after each Russian attack attests to such hope.
“You can imagine an electrician who, each day after the drone attacks, has to reconnect the cables in order to give us light,” Major Archbishop Shevchuk said. “They know that maybe tomorrow, with a new rocket attack, their work will be destroyed. But each day, they are reconnecting those cables.”
Similarly, “doctors, nurses, who each day are supposed to heal the wounds of children, civilians … do know that tomorrow somebody else will be injured,” he said. “But generously, each day, they are saving human lives.”
Young generations of Ukrainians “have the courage to create new families, to bring into this world their kids.”
Ultimately, he said, the “immense sacrifice” of Ukrainians to defend not only their sovereignty but human dignity itself is sustained, explicitly or unconsciously, by an awareness of the divine.
“We can resist guilt and hatred, and we have hope precisely because we do believe in God,” he explained in his homily at Philadelphia’s Cathedral Basilica of Ss. Peter and Paul. “We believe that it is he who executes justice for the oppressed, gives food to the hungry. The Lord sets the prisoners free, protects the strangers, upholds the orphans and the widowed. We know that God is with us.”