On July 23, 2023, a Russian missile strike severely damaged the Transfiguration Cathedral in Odesa, shocking people around the world, including Christians across America. Despite the attacks, Odesans remain fiercely devoted to their city—a resilience I’ve seen throughout Ukraine. My translator, Sasha Pinchuk, embodies that spirit. Born in Sevastopol, Crimea, Sasha’s family left in 2014. In 2017, he spent a year in Newport while his father studied at the Naval War College. After Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Sasha’s mother and siblings fled to the U.S., staying with a family friend in Rhode Island for 18 months. His father remained in Ukraine, serving on the front lines. When I visited Odesa on October 11, I found the damaged cathedral open. The Sunrise Ensemble performed a moving flute recital in front of it, which we filmed for a short video. Inside, debris remained, but reconstruction had begun. We were even allowed to film inside the nave. That visit also led me to Fr. Theodore Orobets at the smaller Cathedral of the Nativity. Just a month later, it too was hit by a missile. Fr. Orobets explained the distinction between Ukrainian Orthodox churches and those aligned with Moscow, which supports Russian aggression. He firmly denied any persecution of Christians by Ukraine and emphasized the freedom of religious life—unless clergy support the enemy. When sirens sound, his family prays. “Our true defender,” he told me, “is not just Ukraine’s army—but God.”
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