Andrey Sheptytsky
Andrey Sheptytsky (1865–1944), born Roman Aleksander Maria Szeptycki, was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic prelate who served as Metropolitan Archbishop of Halych and Lviv from 1900 until his death, leading the church through tumultuous periods including two world wars and multiple regimes.[1][2]
Born into Polish nobility on July 29, 1865, Sheptytsky entered the Basilian order, adopting the monastic name Andrey, and was ordained in 1894 before rapid elevation to metropolitan at age 35, where he prioritized Ukrainian-language liturgy, monastic renewal, and educational institutions like the Lviv Theological Academy to strengthen the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church amid cultural suppression.[1][3][4]
A vocal supporter of Ukrainian national aspirations and independence efforts, he invested family wealth in schools, publications, and youth education abroad, fostering cultural and civic revival while navigating Austrian, Russian, Polish, Soviet, and Nazi occupations.[3][5]
During the Nazi occupation of Galicia in World War II, Sheptytsky initially greeted German forces as liberators from Soviet rule but swiftly condemned their atrocities, issuing pastoral letters protesting mass killings, appealing directly to Heinrich Himmler to halt Jewish exterminations, and directing monasteries under his authority to shelter approximately 150 Jews, saving their lives through organized networks of clergy and religious orders.[6][7][8]
These rescue efforts earned posthumous recognition from bodies like the Anti-Defamation League, though Yad Vashem has withheld Righteous Among the Nations status amid debates over his early endorsement of the invasion and ties to Ukrainian nationalist groups later accused of collaboration, claims often traced to Soviet-era distortions rather than uncontroverted evidence of personal complicity in Nazi crimes.[9][10][11]