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The Kyiv Ukraine Temple is the 134th operating temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). The intent to build the temple was announced by the church's First Presidency on July 20, 1998. [2] Located in Sofiivska Borshchahivka, [3] near Kyiv (the capital of Ukraine), it is the LDS Church's 11th temple in Europe, the ...
Ground was finally broken in 2007, [11] and the temple was completed and dedicated on August 29, 2010. [12] The Kyiv Ukraine Temple was to accommodate members from Armenia, Belarus, Bulgaria, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine. [13] On May 30, 2004, the Kyiv Ukraine Stake, Ukraine's first, was organized. [14]
Temples of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) are buildings dedicated to be a House of the Lord. They are considered by church members to be the most sacred structures on earth. When construction is completed, temples are usually open to the public for a short period of time (an "open house").
Google has updated it's aerial maps of Ukraine for the first time since the start of Russia's attack - with images now revealing the full scale of devastation. The contrast is stark in Mariupol.
Among the 351 damaged cultural properties they examined, only 211 met their criteria and were annotated and were included in their dataset. [ 7 ] Both Ukraine and Russia have signed the Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict (the 1954 Hague Convention), which was drafted to safeguard cultural ...
This Orthodox Easter season, an extraordinary new church is bringing spiritual comfort to war-weary residents of the Ukrainian village of Lypivka. Almost 100 residents sheltered in a basement ...
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The two-week Russian occupation left the village shattered and the church itself — a modern replacement for an older structure — damaged while still under construction. It’s one of 129 war-damaged Ukrainian religious sites recorded by UNESCO, the United Nations’ cultural organization. “It’s solid concrete,” the priest said.