After its searches of holy sites belonging to Ukraine’s historic Orthodox church, the nation’s security agency posted photos of evidence it recovered — including rubles, Russian passports and leaflets with messages from the Moscow patriarch. Supporters and detractors of the church debate whether such items are innocuous — or increase suspicions the church is a nest of pro-Russian propaganda and intelligence-gathering.
Related posts
-
Retired Schaumburg pastor and Vietnam-era Air Force chaplain dies at 99
Rev. George J. Kane, the longest-ordained priest in the Archdiocese of Chicago who was founding pastor... -
Wheeling police officers call for chief, deputy chief to be removed
Union representatives for the Wheeling Police Department’s patrol officers and sergeants this week publicly demanded two... -
With elections behind and budgets ahead, suburbs start enacting grocery taxes
Suburban towns are starting to implement grocery taxes to replace an expiring state tax, with an...