“Returning to Minsk, I was not allowed in at the Kuznica-Bialystok border crossing,” Archbishop Tadeusz Kondrusiewicz of Minsk-Mohilev told the Catholic Information Agency, KAI, in neighbouring Poland Aug. 31.
“No explanation was offered whatsoever, even though I’m a citizen of Belarus. I was told I was banned from entering Belarus, nothing more.”
Church sources in Minsk confirmed the exclusion of the 74-year-old Church leader, as Belarusian security forces confronted demonstrators protesting the rule of President Alexander Lukashenko, who claimed to win a disputed presidential election Aug. 9.
In a statement Sept. 1, Lukashenko said there was information Kondrusiewicz might have citizenship in more than one country.
“We’re studying (it), I’m not confirming it. We want to study the issue. If everything is clean and legal, we will act according to the law. We do not care who he is — the top Catholic, Orthodox or Muslim. He must live according to the law,” Lukashenso said.
In his letter, read in Catholic churches Aug. 30, Kondrusiewicz said society was “spiritually ill” in Belarus, adding that he had arranged for a statue of St. Michael the Archangel to be carried through the Church’s four dioceses in a bid to settle current conflicts.
“Our motherland is experiencing an unprecedented sociopolitical crisis, deepening day by day — in peace-loving and tolerant Belarus, brother has raised his hand against brother, resulting in bloodshed and many injuries,” said the archbishop.
“The difficult economic situation is deeply alarming and we are threatened with international isolation, while the schism of society increases. ... Increasingly, one can hear that the threat of civil war is becoming real, something none of us imagined a few months ago.
“From the very beginning of the sociopolitical crisis, the Catholic Church has encouraged prayer and called problems to be solved through dialogue, remembering Christ’s words that without Him we could do nothing,” Kondrusiewicz said.
“This crisis is an inevitable consequence of the sin of lawlessness. It is therefore necessary to confess personal and collective sin and repent, in order to change our lives.”
Belarus’ Interior Ministry confirmed at least 140 arrests during Aug. 30 protests around Minsk’s Independence Square.
Meanwhile, Lukashenko, in power since 1994, again denied electoral fraud and was shown carrying a machine gun outside his palace in an official birthday photo.
Church leaders confirmed Catholic clergy and laypeople had been beaten and jailed during protests, while in an Aug. 14 message to state officials, Kondrusiewicz said, “The beating of peaceful demonstrators who want to know the truth, their cruel treatment and inhumane detention, is a grave sin on the conscience of those who give criminal orders and commit violence.”
In an Aug. 31 interview with Poland’s Catholic TV Trwam, Kondrusiewicz warned the country’s opposition had no clear leader or values, but said he believed a new generation in Belarus had now “grown up to defend its rights.”
“There is reason to believe the election was dishonest — I have repeatedly appealed on behalf of the bishops’ conference for the problems to be resolved through peace and understanding, through a roundtable,” the Church leader said.
“Despite the suffering, the Christian approach must be one of forgiveness. But people often do not hear the voice of the Church, and I’m afraid the lack of any settlement is threatening a civil war.”