‘The fruit of renewal’

Greek Catholics restore former Ukrainian Mennonite church building



A former Mennonite church building in Ukraine is being restored and transformed with the help of Canadian Mennonites into a Greek Catholic church.

According to observers, this development is an example of Mennonite-Catholic collaboration in the spirit of other exchanges over the past decade or so.

The Mennonite church in the former village of Schoensee—now Snegurovka—was originally built in 1909. During the Soviet era after the October 1917 Russian Revolution, when Mennonites were forced to leave, the church building was used for storage and then fell into disrepair.

Recently, the Greek Catholic Church in Ukraine secured ownership of the building and a retired Catholic priest from the Czech Republic, Father Peter Trenzky, is giving leadership to the restoration as well as to the congregation, which has started to worship in the building.

In learning about the restoration project, individuals associated with the Mennonite Centre in nearby Molochansk—formerly Halbstad—offered to help. The Centre was established in 2001 in the former Mennonite Girls School  to provide a range of community services.

“Initially, Father Peter was afraid that Mennonites wanted to take back the church,” said George Dyck, treasurer of Friends of the Mennonite Centre in Ukraine, the Canadian-based charity providing partial funding to the project over the past year. (Visit http://www.mennonitecentre.ca or the “Mennonite Centre Ukraine” Facebook page for more information about the Friends organization.)

Dyck describes the involvement as a “mutual embrace of returning Mennonites with their former fellow villagers,” adding that the official opening of the restored church will be held in July or August of this year.

According to Darrin Snyder Belousek, the renovation of the former Schoensee church “is the fruit of the renewal of the Catholic Church in Ukraine.” Snyder Belousek is executive director of Bridgefolk, a North American-based movement of Mennonites and Catholics that holds an annual gathering to learn from each other’s traditions.

He further pointed out “a parallel of sorts” between the experiences of Ukrainian Catholics and that of Russian Mennonites. The former lost their churches, had no legal protection and survived as an underground church during the Soviet era. Russian Mennonites also were not officially recognized by the Soviets and assimilated with the Baptists.

“Both churches faced repression under similar circumstances from the same oppressor,” commented Snyder Belousek, “and had to make costly choices to keep faithful.”

–Posted June 4, 2014



One response to “‘The fruit of renewal’”

  1. Albert Durksen Avatar
    Albert Durksen

    My grandparents were baptized
    My grandparents were baptized and married in this church in Schoensee. My parents saw it in its state of ruin and my father wept (the church building saw some very “un-churchly” uses through the decades. What a joy it was to me to read about the rehabilitation of this building that had been dedicated to the service of our God and to know that it once again will serve that holy purpose for generations to come. May all who worship there find the peace and love of our God.
    Albert Durksen, Winnipeg. MB

Leave a Reply