Beloved children in Christ, blessed
co-celebrants in the liturgy of the mysteries of God.
In this peaceful land of Finland, we welcome with emotion and fatherly love our
most beloved children of neighbouring Estonia, which is again free, after fifty
years of Soviet occupation. From amidst the Finnish people, who were your kin,
friend and always our ally, we convey through you the greeting of Christ and
our Patriarchal blessing to all the Orthodox Communities of Estonia, which,
since last February appealed to us to re-establish the canonical dependence of
the Autonomous Orthodox Church of Estonia upon the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
This was the status of the Estonian Church for as long as Estonia was free,
from the year 1923 until the coerced annexation of your fatherland to the
Soviet Union.
The capture of your land by the Red Army, according to the agreement between
Hitler and Stalin and the abolishment of the national liberty of the Estonians
by the Stalinist tyranny was accompanied by the suppression of the autonomy of
the Orthodox Church of Estonia and by the obstruction of its unity with the
sacred center of Orthodoxy.
It is, therefore, obvious that the re-establishment of the old canonical order
in the Estonian Orthodox Church, in the manner it was agreed upon by the
Patriarchal and Synodical Tomos, constituted the answer of our Holy Mother
Church to the general demand of all Estonians and Russians in free Estonia.
Even the Russian Orthodox who lived in Estonia no longer accepted their
dependence on the Russian patriarchate, located in the atheistic Soviet Union.
Besides, no one can deny that the abolition of that ecclesiastical autonomy was
decided by a foreign occupational force on Estonia. This was not decided by the
Orthodox of Estonia, but was accomplished by force, by an atheistic
dictatorship and not by the canonical process.
For this reason our blessed predecessors, the Ecumenical Patriarchs continued
to recognise the adherents to the canonical state, only those in Orthodox
Estonians of the diaspora. They were under the self-exiled and blessed
canonical Metropolitan of Estonia Alexander. After his death, they appointed a
"locum tenens" for the vacant Autonomous Church of Estonia till the
year 1978.
We do not find, therefore, obstacles of canonical order for the reactivation,
within the present free Estonia, of the stipulations of the Patriarchal Tomos
of the year 1923, which we request. Moreover, we believe that no one can add
canonical validity to change in the church of Estonia,which was forcefully
imposed by the Stalinist dictatorship. Above all, this could not be done by the
most holy Russian Church, ...
Moreover, we know that our beloved brother, His Beatitude Patriarch Alexius II
of Moscow and all Russia does not fail to mention the fact that, born in
Estonia around 1929, he was baptised and spent his youth with that autonomous
church, under the pallium of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople,
under the blessed Metropolitan of Estonia Alexander. Besides, also the father
of His Beatitude, Michael Rodiger, studied under Metropolitan Alexander in the
Seminary of Tallinn, and from him, obviously, received the priesthood in 1940.
Therefore, certainly His Beatitude Patriarch Alexius II disputes neither the
canonical status of the then Autonomous Church of Estonia under Metropolitan
Alexander, of blessed memory, nor does His Beatitude present objections of
canonical nature to the re-establishment of the valid, canonical order in the
Estonian Church, the order, which was later overthrown by the Stalinist
tyranny.
On the other hand, the removal of the figuratively small Orthodox Church
ofEstonia does not lessen in any way the great majesty of the huge Russian
Church comprised of two hundred million Russians.
Nevertheless, there exist personal objections on behalf of His Beatitude
Patriarch Alexius II, due not to his opposition towards you, the Estonians, but
because of his close personal ties with his beloved fatherland Estonia.
.. He was born in Estonia, he lived there for most of his life, there lie the
graves of his parents, there he started serving the church since he was 16
years old, as a subdeacon in the Cathedral of Saint Alexander Nevsky, in
Tallinn. He shepherded Estonia as a Bishop continuously since 1961, he
continued to shepherd the Estonian Church when he was elevated as Metropolitan
of Leningrad in 1986, and as Patriarch of Moscow since 1990, when he was
elected Patriarch and enthroned. He never wished to detach himself from his
beloved Estonia. How, then, can he do this today?
.. Nevertheless, we cannot ignore the fact that the Estonian Orthodox Church;
remaining perhaps under the jurisdiction of the Russian Patriarchal, could have
very adverse results for the future of Estonian Orthodoxy. The Estonian soul
associated its subjugation under the Russian Church with the Soviet occupation
of the land. The Russian Church, under the Soviet rule, suffered much more and
much longer than the Estonian. The dependence of Estonian Orthodoxy upon Moscow
appears as the last remnant of the Stalinist tyranny. But, even in the event
that the memory of the Soviet period is wiped out, in the future, we know very
well that the magnitude and the might of the
Russian giant shall present itself as a menace to Estonia, We understand,
therefore, some existing fears that, if you the Orthodox Estonians, continue to
depend on the Russian Patriarchal, you will be considered foreigners to the
body of Estonian society and even suspicious, as collaborators of your
dangerous neighbour.
Certainly, the danger of persecutions does not exist in Estonia, yet the
survival and progress of the church seems to be problematic, if it does not
enjoy total national confidence, if the national dignity of its members is
disputed.
We believe that our dear brother, His Beatitude Patriarch Alexius II of Moscow
comprehends this problem and that he will soon sacrifice his own personal ties
with Estonia for the general benefit of her Orthodoxy. Then, after the
disagreement is peacefully transcended, we are confident that
the Orthodox in Estonia, both Estonian and Russian, with joy and in one heart
welcome His Beatitude, as often as he visits his birthplace, his parents'
graves, the beloved places to whom he offered his service as a priest and a
bishop.
Then, for as long as you, Orthodox Estonians, will receive national recognition
in your land, as the orthodox Finns in Finland have received it, you will also
have the guarantee of peace and progress which your Orthodox Russian brothers
enjoy in Estonia, and together with them you will certainly form one, undivided
Orthodox Church.
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