Will He Really Come?
It is also worthy of note that, apart from the Pope's Baltic sojourns,
this will be his first visit to the post-Soviet territory. John Paul II
dreamed of visiting Russia whose leaders - first Mikhail Gorbachev and
then Boris Yeltsin - invited him, but the Moscow Patriarchate had always
opposed such visits. This is obvious: if Patriarch Alexei II deigns to
send birthday greetings to President Yeltsin on a par with none other than
Premier Yevgeny Primakov and Presidential Chief of Staff Nikolai Bordiuzha,
why should he have in Moscow the Pope who may not even know who Bordiuzha
is? I am not, of course, going to minimize all this. The serious reader
will understand how complex the relations between the Vatican and the Moscow
Patriarchate are, but the state of these relations today is objectively
conducive to the papal trip to Ukraine. There are not so many people of
this caliber left in our time of expediency. We need to see him.
Выпуск газеты №:
№6, (1999)Section
Day After Day