Home International News After spike in COVID-19 infections and deaths,Ukrainian Catholics open Resurrection Cathedral as...

After spike in COVID-19 infections and deaths,Ukrainian Catholics open Resurrection Cathedral as vaccination site

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A woman receives a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine at the Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ in Kyiv, Ukraine, Nov. 8, 2021. The clinic was opened after the head of the Ukrainian Catholic Church accepted a request by the government to host vaccination clinics in churches and monasteries. Ukraine experienced its highest number of new COVID-19 infections and highest daily number of deaths in October. (CNS photo/Valentyn Ogirenko, Reuters)

KYIV, Ukraine   — With demand for vaccines growing after a spike in COVID-19 infections and deaths, the major archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church opened Resurrection Cathedral in Kyiv as a vaccination site.

Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, major archbishop of Kyiv-Halych, announced to parishioners at the cathedral Nov. 7 that government health workers would begin using the cathedral after he accepted a request to host vaccination clinics in churches and monasteries.

Promoting human life today, he told parishioners, includes not being afraid of the vaccine, wearing masks, maintaining social distancing and frequent hand-washing.

“In every corner of our church in Ukraine and abroad we try to serve with all that we have at our disposal to save people’s lives and health,” he said, according to a note released by the church’s press office.

According to the Worldometer coronavirus tracker, Ukraine hit a one-day record number of new cases Nov. 4 with 27,377 new infections reported. Since the pandemic began, more than 3.2 million Ukrainians had tested positive for COVID-19 and close to 78,000 had died as of Nov. 16.

At the same time, Archbishop Shevchuk’s office said, the vaccine rollout and its acceptance by the people were slow. In early November only 18% of the population was fully vaccinated and only 22% had received the first of a two-dose vaccine regime. Vaccination rates did begin to rise, though, after the spike in cases in late October and early November.