The statement from the Ukrainian bishops said the prelates “expressed the Ukrainian people’s pain, suffering, and a certain disappointment” over the papal remarks.
Two days ago, speaking to reporters aboard his plane returning from a trip to Mongolia, Francis acknowledged that his comments on Russia were badly phrased and said his intention was to remind young Russians of a great cultural heritage and not a political, imperial one.
The bishops’ statement said they told the pope that certain statements and gestures of “the Holy See and Your Holiness are painful and difficult for the Ukrainian people, who are currently bleeding in the struggle for their dignity and independence”.
They told him that such statements were “used by Russian propaganda to justify and support the murderous ideology of the ‘Russian World’,” a reference to Putin’s attempts to justify actions in Ukraine by propounding a view of history that asserts Ukraine has no real national identity or tradition of statehood.
While the pope has condemned the war as an unjustified act of aggression and has called Ukraine a “martyred nation” at nearly each of his public appearances since the invasion last year, he has disappointed Ukrainians by not forcefully and specifically calling out Putin as the conflict’s instigator.