Sunday, March 15, 2026

On the ROCOR/MP Union: Lessons of the Past and Challenges of the Present

Archpriest Valery Alexeev | June 27 / July 10, 2007

Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Church, Astoria, New York

 

 

When the negotiations of the ROCOR with the MP began, in certain theological articles that called into question the method of these negotiations, a sinister word appeared, wounding the historical memory: unia. Let us recall that unia means a union in which one side, in its own interests, absorbs the other.

Everyone who is familiar with the history of the unions (we mean the unions that were concluded between a Local Orthodox Church or its region and Roman Catholicism) knows that these unions were accompanied by betrayal of Orthodoxy, violations of dogmatic principles and the holy canons, hostility, hatred, hierarchical arbitrariness, persecutions of the confessors of Orthodoxy, the arbitrariness of “outsiders,” bloodshed, martyrdom: the unions foretold evil!

What then occurred on May 4/17 of the current year [2007], on the feast of the Ascension of the Lord, in the Moscow Cathedral of Christ the Savior? Did all remain in the status of witnesses of Christ, to which the apostolic and evangelical readings of this feast call us, or did some, in the ongoing universal judicial process—for now is the judgment of this world (John 12:31)—withdraw from their testimony?

It is known that the canonical law of the Orthodox Church does not know such a definition of falling away from the Church as unia; [1] the unions arose already after the Ecumenical and Local Councils of the first millennium after Christ, but it does know such a form of preserving ecclesiastical unity as a canonical and Eucharistic rupture, [2] “walling-off,” or “separation.” [3] St. Basil the Great, in his first canonical rule, calls, in agreement with the ancients, three forms of falling away from the purity of Orthodoxy: heresy (false teaching), schism (a division), and parasynagogue (an unlawful assembly). As we see in the recent history of the Universal Church, many Local Churches accept, assimilate, retain, and develop within themselves signs of heresy (the acceptance of new heretical doctrines and theories), schism, or self-willed action (the usurpation of ecclesiastical authority), which can be healed by a Local Council of the Church afflicted by these maladies. Let us note that heretically-minded Churches, or heretical Confessions that have completely fallen away from the Church, always strive to attach to themselves and subject to themselves those Local Churches or ecclesiastical regions that remain in dogmatic and ecclesiological purity, through unions, or unias, the cornerstone of which is always a confessional compromise or economia, [4] which, as we shall see below, ought not to occur.

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, passing through its complex history, is well acquainted with such phenomena as schism (a division) or parasynagogue (an unlawful assembly). Metropolitan Laurus, in his message to the participants of the extraordinary congress of the Sydney and Australian–New Zealand Diocese, wrote: “I would like to remind everyone that at the present moment the discussion is not about ‘joining,’ ‘merging,’ or ‘union’ with the Moscow Patriarchate, but about the reconciliation of the two parts of the Russian Orthodox Church.” If, however, we dare to give an evaluation of the phenomenon and call it—“conciliatory communion passing into unification” of a part of the ROCOR with the MP—the name unia, it is necessary for us to examine its nature in general as a historically anti-ecclesiastical phenomenon and to clarify what actually occurred: reconciliation through Eucharistic communion, unification on the basis of unanimity of mind, or self-liquidation on the basis of unconditional capitulation (let us note that capitulation is surrender into captivity, the surrender of positions, subordination, the renunciation of one’s ideals, an attempt at survival), that is—captivity.

Let us give an example: the Moscow Patriarchate, and almost all the other Local Orthodox Churches, have already reconciled themselves with the Roman Catholic Confession, declared it their Sister Church (“Balamand”), and recognized the Monophysite Confessions as Eastern Orthodox (Chambésy). Orthodox and Catholic bishops, as yet, do not openly receive communion together, although certain cases of joint Eucharistic communion are known; [5] but they already pray together, and Catholic laymen, without converting to Orthodoxy, receive communion in Orthodox churches in Russia.

This, indeed, is reconciliation, with the introduction of gradual Eucharistic communion, but, for now, it is still not full unification, and not a complete unia. Let us note that the ROCOR will now also have to receive Roman Catholics no longer through the sacrament of Baptism and to admit them to Holy Communion. According to the Act that was signed, the ROCOR must present the candidacies of its bishops for approval to the Patriarch; it must receive Holy Myron from him. And it will now also be necessary to concelebrate not only with the Serbs-ecumenists, but also with other ecumenical Churches—the new-calendarists and the new-paschalists… This is not reconciliation, but unia!

But for the moment, let us consider the lessons of the past.

The first historical lesson is the Union of Ferrara-Florence of 1439. It is known that the episcopate, headed by the Patriarch of Constantinople Metrophanes, and afterwards by Patriarch Gregory Mammas, at this council betrayed Orthodoxy and accepted the Roman Catholic dogmas. And only one hierarch—St. Mark of Ephesus, who did not sign the conciliar decrees—remained Orthodox, broke his canonical and Eucharistic relations with the heretically-minded uniates, that is, he acted according to the second half of the 15th canon of the First-Second Council: “and he did not cut off the unity of the Church by a schism, but rather hastened to guard the Church from schism and division.” [6]

Thus, according to dogmatic principles, “Union [of separated Churches, or regions of the Church, Archp. V.A.] is possible only on the basis of one, single dogmatics (…), for dogmatics is the foundation, the skeleton upon which the whole Body of the Church rests. Remove this firm, integral dogmatics, and the Church will cease to be the Church. The presence of two different dogmatic principles within the same Church, or some compromise of two opposing dogmatic principles, is an absurdity which will cost the Church its destruction.” [7]

In this case the Patriarchate of Constantinople entered into a compromise with the Roman Catholics and accepted the Latin doctrines; but let us also remember the following: “In Ferrara, the principal motive of almost all the Greeks was political…” [8] How close this is to our own time!

Let us therefore trace the history of this union. In April 1438 a commission was formed from representatives of the Orthodox and the Roman Catholics, which was entrusted to clarify the points of disagreement, examine them, and indicate the path toward the conclusion of a union. These proceedings did not pass entirely smoothly, and the Orthodox did not agree on questions concerning the Latin dogmas. Concerning the fruitlessness of these disputations, St. Mark of Ephesus wrote: “To say this seemed like singing to deaf ears, or boiling a stone, or sowing upon stone, or writing upon water, or something similar that is said in proverbs regarding the impossible.” [9]

And nevertheless, certain members of the Orthodox delegation spoke in favor of accepting the Latin dogmas, sought a modus unionis, and “began to work out certain formulas by which they might unite with them, representing a certain compromise (…) as though a kind of boot fitting both one foot and the other.” [10] In the end there took place the promulgation—the solemn proclamation—of the union.

St. Mark of Ephesus did not follow this path. He “did not permit any compromise in matters of faith. They cried to Mark: ‘Find for us a way out, an economia.’ Mark replied: ‘Matters of faith do not admit economia. It is the same as saying: cut off your head and go wherever you wish.’ ‘Never, O man, are the things that pertain to the Church resolved through compromises.’” [11]

But the zealots of Orthodoxy gathered around St. Mark… “Yet it was not the mighty of this world who gathered around him. The episcopate, headed by Patriarch Metrophanes and afterwards by Patriarch Gregory Mammas, was in the hands of the Uniates; we do not hear a single name of a bishop among the supporters of St. Mark of Ephesus, not one high-ranking person, whether at the court of the Emperor or of the patriarch. But the army of St. Mark was numerous: it consisted of monks, first of all the monks of Athos; it consisted of presbyters, often rural and unknown, of whom the sources say ‘a certain presbyter’; it consisted of deacons; it consisted of the little ones of this world.” [12]

St. Mark was not broken either by persecutions, nor by imprisonment in the fortress of Mundros, nor by a severe cancerous illness. “Therefore, brethren, flee from them and from communion with them; for they are ‘false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ. …Beware of evil workers, beware of the mutilation.’” [13]

In a letter to Hieromonk Theophanes he wrote: “Therefore, you also, brethren, flee from communion with those with whom one ought not to have it, and from the commemoration of those whom it is not fitting to commemorate (liturgically)”; [14] (…) “…for this means to mix what cannot be mixed; but they must remain completely separated from us until God grants correction and peace to His Church.” [15]

The Union of Ferrara–Florence did not endure. The Orthodox hierarchy was restored and a First Hierarch of the Church of Constantinople was elected.

More than a hundred years passed, and a new union stirred the life of the Orthodox Church. This union received the name Brest. Like the Florentine union, the Union of Brest had a political background. “Being the most reliable means of assimilation, of the Polonization of the Orthodox population of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was intended to strengthen the political foundation of the Union of Lublin” [16]—that is, the political union of 1569 that united Poland and Lithuania into the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

The bishops were led to the union not by conviction in the truth—asserts the researcher of this period of Church history—not by ideological or religious motives, but by concern that their cathedras, villages and estates, their places in the senate and the diet, and equality in rights with the Catholic bishops should be preserved for them.

In contrast to the Union of Ferrara–Florence, which was conducted through theological disputations, “the preparation of the Orthodox Church in Poland for union with Rome was carried out in an atmosphere of secrecy, observed both by the bishops and by the government”; [17] “…the question of the union was discussed not at the regular councils of bishops, at which clergy and laity were present, but at secret, ‘pokutnye’ (that is, ‘in corners’) gatherings.” [18]

Even before the council that was to decide the question of the union, Metropolitan Michael (Rogoza) and the bishops of Vladimir, Lutsk, and Pinsk, together with the archimandrite of Kobrin, Jonah (Gogol), signed the pope’s letter, thereby expressing their agreement to accept the union; and in December 1595 the bishops Hypatius (Potsei) and Cyril (Terletsky), at an audience with Pope Clement VIII, completely betrayed Orthodoxy.

In June 1595 the protector of Orthodoxy, Prince Konstantin Ostrozhsky, wrote in his proclamation: “…In the present times, by the evil cunning of the wicked devil, the very chief leaders of our true faith, having been seduced by the glory of this world and darkened by the darkness of sensual pleasure, our supposed shepherds, the metropolitan with the bishops… secretly agreed among themselves, the accursed ones… to tear away the pious Christians of this region without their knowledge and to cast them with themselves into destruction, as their own most secret writings declare. Having learned with certainty about such apostates and manifest betrayers of the Church of Christ, I inform all of you of them, as beloved brethren in Christ, and I desire together with you to stand united against the enemies of our salvation, so that with the help of God and your zealous effort they themselves may fall into the nets which they secretly prepared for us… What benefit can we have from them? Instead of being the light of the world, they have become darkness and a stumbling block for all.” [19]

The Council of Brest, which took place in 1596, became divided. The defenders of Orthodoxy, among whom were representatives of the Patriarchates of Constantinople and Alexandria, resolved: to deprive the apostates of their episcopal cathedras, not to permit the conclusion of the union, and strictly to adhere to the Julian calendar. The apostates from Orthodoxy, for their part, issued an act and a conciliar charter of union (unia) with Rome, and they anathematized the Orthodox clergy.

Now let us summarize. “The union was the work of bishops who acted in separation from the church people, without their free and conciliar agreement and counsel… At the same time, these Uniate bishops considered their submission to Roman authority and jurisdiction to be a ‘union of the Churches,’ while the resistance of the people they regarded as canonical arbitrariness and rebellion… The Orthodox, on the contrary, saw in this disobedience and in this inevitable anti-hierarchical struggle only the fulfillment of their Christian duty, the duty of faithfulness and faith. The struggle against the union was above all a manifestation of the conciliar consciousness of the church people” [20]—that is, reception.

Let us note that the idea of the unification of the two parts of the Russian Orthodox Church, which became separated after certain well-known historical events, as many now say, is entirely natural and corresponds to the evangelical principle: “that they may all be one, as We are” (John 17:11).

Here, first of all, I will express an opinion concerning such a concept or definition as “a part of the Church.” Canonical law does not know such a term or definition. In ecclesiastical relations such a definition has developed as:

1. The Mother Church, or the Kyriarchal Church, in relation to its canonical regions or daughter jurisdictions, that is, Autonomous Churches, to which the Mother Church has granted the rights of autonomy, or the rights of broad autonomy differing little from autocephaly, or autocephaly itself.

2. Two regions (or jurisdictions) of one historically formed Church that are in canonical separation for various reasons, which, with dogmatic unanimity, may unite.

3. The Mother Church, or a church region, and a schismatic society that has fallen away from it, which through repentance may join the Mother Church. But the designation of a canonical jurisdiction as a “part” of the Church is incorrect, for it closely touches upon the ecumenical term “branch,” condemned as a heresy, the so-called “branch theory.” [21] The canonical definition is a church region. [22]

Let us note that the official negotiations between the MP and ROCOR were preceded by numerous visits of the higher hierarchy and clergy of ROCOR to the Fatherland, and from the Fatherland to the Council of Bishops by high officials of the Russian Federation, in which political motives are clearly visible: as in Ferrara, and as in Brest, that is, motives characteristic not of union but of unia. State officials do not have the right to intrude into the sphere of ecclesiastical relations.

By concluding the Union of Ferrara–Florence, Emperor John Palaiologos hoped to save the capital of the empire from the Turks; the hierarchy, which received from the pope a “considerable sum,” [23] and had reached the point where “the monetary factor played no small role in the matter of the Union,” [24] thought to preserve their cathedras—that is, their privileges—while the pope sought to attach Constantinople to Rome, that is, Orthodoxy to papism.

By concluding the Union of Brest, King Sigismund III Vasa strove to bring the Orthodox population of the Ukrainian and Belarusian lands under his authority into obedience to the Roman See, and consequently to his state; while the hierarchy of the Lithuanian Metropolia, having lost its Orthodox principledness, was at that time guided only by “ambition and the thirst for advantage.” [25]

And what political background is present in the case of the Moscow union, which we are now considering? On the one hand, it is the loss of the free voice of the church region in the Russian diaspora; it is the property of ROCOR—churches and monasteries, part of which has already been seized and which will gradually pass into the ownership of state structures existing in the Fatherland; it is the long-desired end of the White Movement and its historical legacy; it is the erosion of Orthodox theology, capable of resisting the heretical ecumenical pseudo-theology. On the side of the hierarchy that concluded the union, it is the mythical fear of finding itself isolated from “world Orthodoxy,” which has already fallen into dogmatic and ecclesiological heresies, although the Lord nevertheless calls: “come out from among them and be separate” (2 Cor. 6:17); it is the attempt, by concluding the union, to affirm its “canonical existence,” as if the bishops of the Church Abroad had doubted their own canonicity—something of which for seventy years they had been accused by patriarchal theologians and hierarchs of the Sergianist tendency, namely of the “Karlovci schism.”

Then the work of the bilateral Commissions began, which were to clarify, as once in Ferrara, the points of disagreement. It cannot be said that the negotiations always proceeded smoothly. Once again, as before, they were “singing to deaf ears,” “boiling stones,” “writing on water,” and “sowing on stones.” But most important was the complete secrecy of the negotiating process, about which the believing people of ROCOR knew nothing, although they had the right to their reception. As once in Brest, the negotiations were conducted “in corners,” without subsequent broad information. It would have been possible, for example, to publish a bulletin in which the process of negotiations, statements, arguments, and remarks, as well as the names of the defenders of the historical principles of ROCOR and their opponents, would be reproduced stenographically and precisely. Such a bulletin could have provided a place for a general church discussion. This did not occur, and the process of negotiations proceeded along the path conceived and planned by the administration of the Moscow Patriarchate: along the path of economia, or compromise. A departure took place from the resolutions of the Pastoral Conference in Nyack, the Fourth All-Diaspora Council in San Francisco, and even the Council of Bishops of ROCOR in 2006. They did not wait for a Local Council of the All-Russian Orthodox Church, and the union was carried out suddenly and hastily, that is, as people used to say, “at Bolshevik tempos.”

The ROCOR Commission did not defend the principle that the election of the Moscow patriarchs during the Soviet God-fighting era took place in violation of canonical rules; that the Patriarch of Moscow is only the First Hierarch of the ROC MP, a church region whose foundation was laid by a non-canonical synod that usurped ecclesiastical authority; that this church region is not the Kyriarchal Mother Church, and that the Patriarch is not the First Hierarch of the entire fullness of Russian Orthodoxy. The commission also did not defend the principle that the Russian Church Abroad is an independent canonical region, or jurisdiction, possessing its own canonical First Hierarch in the rank of Metropolitan, having preserved dogmatic purity and not having come into contact with the ecumenical heresy.

Which church region of the divided Russian Church, then, should nevertheless be considered the Mother Church? We know that the division of the Russian Orthodox Church occurred not because one of its regions remained in the Fatherland conquered by the God-fighters, while part of the hierarchy, on the basis of the holy canons, without abandoning the flock that was leaving the Fatherland, shared exile with it and formed the Refugee Church—the church region abroad, which in history received the name Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

The prayerful and Eucharistic separation occurred after, in the church region existing in the Fatherland, governed by the synod of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), who had usurped the supreme ecclesiastical administration, there appeared the most grievous violations in the sphere of Orthodox ecclesiology—a symphony in the sphere of church governance between the hierarchy and the structures of the God-fighting state regime; when there occurred the appropriation of primatial authority by Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) while the confessor–metropolitan, the Locum Tenens Peter, was still alive at that time; when the theory was created of transferring the rights of the Patriarchal Locum Tenens to the Deputy of the Patriarchal Locum Tenens; when there sounded throughout the whole world a false witness, which became a scandal both for many exiles and for the peoples living in free countries—the interview of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), and later the publication of the book “The Truth about Religion in the USSR.” It was also when even the exiles themselves were required to show loyalty to the God-fighters and to renounce the struggle against them—the demand to sign declarations of loyalty to the Soviet authority, which served as the cause of a schism in ROCOR; when a systematic alteration of the episcopate of the Russian Orthodox Church began; when the confessors and the new martyrs were betrayed and declared schismatics and “enemies of the people,” counter-revolutionaries—when they were suspended from priestly service and deprived of their episcopal cathedras. These archpastors, pastors, and their flock formed yet another region of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Fatherland—the True Orthodox Church, which withdrew into internal emigration. This church region could rightly have been called the Mother Church. It could, because all its hierarchs accepted a martyr’s end, did not enter into union with the God-fighters, and did not violate the Orthodox confession of faith. The small remnants of its pastors and believers who survived after the shipwreck were reunited with their Sister—the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, to which there also joined certain pastors of the Moscow Patriarchate who had entered into a canonical rupture with the administration of the MP, according to the second half of the 15th canon of the First–Second Council, and who formed parish communities and then dioceses within the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of ROCOR in the Fatherland, in accordance with the Statute on the Parishes of the Free Russian Church, adopted by the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia on May 2/15, 1990. The hierarchy of ROCOR was unable to defend its pastors and flock in the Fatherland who had joined ROCOR and who, in violation of the canons, were subjected to unjust condemnations and prohibitions; they were simply pushed away, with complete trust placed in the accusations of their accusers. Soon we heard the statement of a responsible hierarch of ROCOR that the creation of free parishes in the Fatherland had been a mistake, an absurdity. Could the Holy Spirit, who acts in agreement with the bishops of the Church at the Council of Bishops, have been mistaken? This would already be blasphemy.

The members of the ROCOR Commission, having been enticed by the so-called “Social Concept” of the ROC MP, which supposedly annulled the “Declaration” of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), failed to discern that the ROC MP, as before, remains dependent on state structures, which it serves, as Metropolitan Sergius taught, “not out of fear, but out of conscience”; that the MP is a component part of these state structures; that its highest hierarchs, for example in Ukraine, are people’s deputies from political parties. The Russian Orthodox Church is separated from the state only formally, that is, on paper.

The Commission of the Russian Church Abroad and its hierarchs were unable to insist that the MP withdraw from the pan-heresy which it had conciliarily recognized—the ecumenical movement—and humbly implored their opponents to leave it, which, naturally, did not occur. They were unable to insist, and indeed did not insist, that the MP break Eucharistic communion with the new-calendarists, ecumenists, and new-paschalists, with whom it must now enter into Eucharistic communion—for example, with the “Autocephalous Orthodox Church in America” and with the “Finnish Orthodox Church.”

Thus, what occurred was not the reconciliation of equal church regions, but a unia, by the signing of which the church region of the Russian Church in the diaspora, bypassing the All-Russian Local Council, found itself in canonical dependence upon another church region that had refused historical repentance for the sins of Sergianism and ecumenism, and the bringing forth of worthy fruits of repentance for these sins, and which had proclaimed to the whole world that among the three monotheistic religions there exists unity in the veneration of the One God and a common ethic…

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, its faithful pastors and flock, cannot agree with this. Trusting only in God, Who at the time appointed by Him “will grant peace and correction to His Church,” offering up their prayers, patiently and with love addressing those who disagree with them, they will pass along their path by the narrow way, through valleys and sorrows, in brotherly communion with the Orthodox Churches that are of one mind with them, strengthened by the prayers of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco, and of the great hierarchs of the Russian diaspora, bearing witness to the world of their standing in the Truth. The Venerable Joseph of Volokolamsk reminds us of the words of St. Athanasius the Great, Patriarch of Alexandria: “It is better to gather in a house of prayer without them than, together with them, to be cast into Gehenna of fire with Annas and Caiaphas.” [26]

 

[1] In the notes of Bishop Nikodim Milash to the 13th canon of the Sixth Ecumenical Council, mention is made of Uniate priests whom Pope Benedict XIV permitted to remain married. This relates to the second millennium after Christ.

[2] The authoritative Russian theologian V. V. Bolotov notes that in the third century, between the Roman and the African Churches, as a result of the dispute concerning the baptism of heretics, “a rupture occurred, but not a schism.”

[3] The Canons of the Orthodox Church, Vol. II. 1994, pp. 307–308.

[4] St. John, Archbishop of Shanghai and San Francisco, writes: “The search for compromise will become the characteristic disposition of people. The directness of confession will disappear. People will subtly justify their fall, and gentle evil will support such a general disposition, and in people there will be formed the habit of apostasy and the sweetness of compromise and sin” (See: John, Archbishop of Shanghai and San Francisco, Discourse on the Last Judgment. — In the collection: Archbishop John (Maximovitch). Archpastor. Man of Prayer. Ascetic. San Francisco, 1991, p. 184).

[5] See: Ludmila Perepelkina, “The Abomination of Desolation.” Ecumenism and Church Liberalism. Saint Petersburg, 1998, p. 221.

[6] The Canons of the Orthodox Church, Vol. II. Op. cit., pp. 307–308.

[7] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite, St. Mark of Ephesus and the Florentine Union. Jordanville, 1963, p. 10.

[8] Ibid., op. cit., p. 17.

[9] Ibid., op. cit., p. 174.

[10] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite, op. cit., p. 220.

[11] Ibid., op. cit., pp. 226–227.

[12] Ibid., p. 322.

[13] Ibid., p. 338.

[14] Ibid., p. 357.

[15] Ibid., p. 370.

[16] Oksiuk, I. F. Union. A Historical Essay. p. 9.

[17] Oksiuk, I. F. Op. cit., p. 11.

[18] Ibid., p. 12.

[19] Metropolitan Macarius (Bulgakov) of Moscow. History of the Russian Church. Vol. 9. St. Petersburg, 1879, pp. 584–585.

[20] Georges Florovsky, Archpriest. The Ways of Russian Theology. Paris, 1937, p. 38.

[21] In 1983 the Council of Bishops of ROCOR proclaimed: “To those who attack the Church of Christ and teach that She is divided into branches (…) ANATHEMA.” (Orthodox Russia—a church and social publication of ROCOR issued by the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, USA, 1984, No. 10, p. 3).

[22] The Canons of the Orthodox Church. Vol. I. St. Petersburg, 1911, p. 307.

[23] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite. Op. cit., p. 33.

[24] Ibid., p. 308.

[25] Koyalovich, M. The Lithuanian Church Union. Vol. I. St. Petersburg, 1859, p. 89.

[26] Ludmila Perepelkina. Op. cit., p. 67.

 

Russian source:

https://sinod.ruschurchabroad.org/070710.htm#%D0%94%D0%9E%D0%9A%D0%9B%D0%90%D0%94_%D0%9F%D0%A0%D0%9E%D0%A2%D0%9E%D0%98%D0%95%D0%A0%D0%95%D0%AF_%D0%92%D0%90%D0%9B%D0%95%D0%A0%D0%98%D0%AF_%D0%90%D0%9B%D0%95%D0%9A%D0%A1%D0%95%D0%95%D0%92%D0%90

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