BELARUS
WELCOME ASIA AFRICA NORTH AMERICA SOUTH AMERICA EUROPE OCEANIA John Paul II

 

Home
Up

 

BELARUS

 

belarus1.gif (766 bytes)

belaru1.jpg (14542 bytes)

This image, of OUR LADY OF THE WAY , an important devotion for Ignatius and his followers, is in a chapel in the Church of the Gesu in Rome, the same Church in which Ignatius is buried. The image was originally in the Church of Santa Maria degli Astalli in Rome.


Listing of Traditional Latin Masses Which Have Been Approved Under Papal Authority.

-- REPUBLIC OF BYELORUSSIA --

(BELARUSSIA)

There are no indult latin masses in the country. Since the independence of Byelorussia, both the latin and the Byzantine Rites have been made widely available but owing to extreme political pressures, the Byzantine Rite has not been given official recognition by the National Government. The majority of citizens belong to the Orthodox Church.

The many Byelorussian Byzantine parishes in the country are under the jurisdiction of Roman ordinaries but the Pope has granted them a visitariate, which is a delegated rather than an ordinary jurisdiction. The visitator works with the ordinaries to see to the pastoral care of Greek-Catholics.

Visitator for Byelorussian Byzantine Catholics living in Belarus [Byelorussia]: Most Rev. Archimandrite Sergius Gajek, M.I.C.

Visitator for Byelorussian Byzantine Catholics living outside Belarus: Most Rev. Protopresbyter Alexander Nadson (at London)

Deanery of Byelorussian Byzantine Parishes, Dean: Most Rev. Protopresbyter Jan Matusevic

There are now parishes at the following places: Baranavichy, Brest, Gomel, Grodno, Ivacevicy, Lida, Maladecna, Minsk (2), Mogilev, Polack (2), and Vitebsk. Of these, only the Parish at Mogilev has had its chapel restored to it. One church is being built for one of the parishes at Polack and a house is being converted to a chapel at Brest. The other parishes use private apartments or Roman Rite churches for mass. But for traditionalists of any Catholic rite, a Byelorussian Byzantine Mass in Old Slavonic is infinitely preferably to a Novus OrdoRoman Mass in any language.

 

 

1