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Historic Orthodox Christian Cathedral Catches Fire During Russian Attack on Ukraine

15 June 2026 at 18:09
Historic Orthodox Christian cathedral in Kyiv with smoke rising after overnight attack
Orthodox Christian cathedral in Kyiv, Ukraine after an overnight missile and drone attack. Credit: Sergey Dolzhenko/EPA/AMNA

A fire broke out at a historic Orthodox Christian cathedral in Kyiv during a sweeping overnight Russian missile and drone attack, officials in Ukraine said.

The blaze struck the Assumption Cathedral (also known as the Dormition Cathedral) within the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra monastery complex. The Lavra, also called the Monastery of the Caves, ranks among the most significant Orthodox Christian monastic sites in Eastern Europe.

UNESCO lists the wider Lavra complex as part of a World Heritage site. For centuries, it has stood as a major spiritual, historical, and cultural symbol of Kyiv.

Russia launches hundreds of missiles and drones

According to representatives from Ukraine’s Air Force, Russia launched 70 missiles and 611 drones during the overnight attack, with Kyiv among the main targets. Ukrainian Air Defense units are said to have intercepted 50 missiles and 582 drones. Despite the interceptions, the barrage killed at least nine people and caused damage in Ukraine’s capital, including at the renowned Orthodox Christian cathedral, where the fire broke out.

The latest attack prompted renewed calls from Kyiv for stronger air defense support from Western allies.

It is important that the world does not remain silent in response to this latest act of Russian barbarism. This strike on the Lavra is an attack on the Christian community and on the cultural heritage of humanity. There can be no justification for this or for any other similar… https://t.co/OFz6SmppIE

— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) June 15, 2026

Zelensky urges G7 to increase pressure on Moscow

Following the strike, Zelensky called on G7 countries to intensify pressure on Russia and boost support for Ukraine’s Air Defense Forces.

Ukraine has repeatedly urged its partners to contribute additional air defense systems as Russia continues to launch large-scale missile and drone attacks against cities, infrastructure, and civilian sites. The damage to the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra added a cultural and religious dimension to the latest attack, given the site’s significance for Orthodox Christianity and Ukrainian heritage.

France condemns damage to Orthodox Christian cathedral in Ukraine

France also condemned the latest Russian strikes on Ukraine, with Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot comparing the incident at the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra to an attack on Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris or the Basilica of Saint-Denis.

Speaking ahead of an EU foreign ministers’ meeting, he described the Lavra as a UNESCO World Heritage monument and called the incident completely unacceptable.

Russians have hit Kyiv's 975 year old Pechersk Lavra complex, one of the world's cradles of Christianity. pic.twitter.com/hO2WBKgfVy

— Jay in Kyiv (@JayinKyiv) June 15, 2026

Moscow denies targeting Orthodox Christian cathedral in Ukraine

Russia’s Defense Ministry denied that its forces targeted the Assumption Cathedral. Moscow claimed the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra complex was hit by a missile from a US-made Patriot air defense system operated by Ukraine. The ministry also alleged that the incident may have been caused by a malfunction linked to expired missiles supplied to Kyiv by Western allies.

Ukraine has accused Russia of carrying out the large-scale overnight attack, while Moscow has sought to deny responsibility for the damage to the historic religious site.

Russia hit Kyiv’s 1,000-year-old monastery, then launched disinformation campaign with five different scenarios. Ukraine has seen this playbook in Mariupol

15 June 2026 at 15:17

The image shows the aftermath of Russia's attack on the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra on 15 June 2026. Credit: DSNS

Russia has launched a large-scale disinformation campaign attempting to justify mass strikes on Kyiv's civilian and cultural objects, the Ukrainian Center for Countering Disinformation (CPD) has announced. Russian sources are using a classic scenario by attempting to disguise outright terror against civilians as "strikes on military targets" or shifting blame to Ukraine itself, the CPD said.

The disinformation campaign follows a pattern Ukrainian authorities have documented after previous Russian strikes on cultural and civilian targets. The Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, a UNESCO World Heritage site dating back to 1051, is protected under the 1954 Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and the Geneva Convention Additional Protocol I, Article 53.

Russian information operations following strikes on Ukrainian civilian targets have followed predictable patterns since 2022.

Five Russian disinformation tactics CPD identified

The CPD documented five specific Russian disinformation tactics deployed after the Kyiv strikes.

  1. The Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra fire is called "Ukrainian provocation" or "self-arson."
  2. Russian conspiracy theories blame Ukrainian authorities for the strike on the Higher Anti-Corruption Court building.
  3. The Dovzhenko Film Studio is declared a "legitimate military target" by Russian propaganda because it is allegedly a "propaganda nest."
  4. False allegations claim Kyiv has weapons-production workshops disguised as civilian buildings — in Russian propagandists' framing, every Kyiv building is a "military object."
  5. And "Ukrainian air defense" is blamed for damage to civilian buildings, a standard Russian deflection tactic.

CPD's framing: Russia carries full responsibility

All responsibility for the death and injury of peaceful Kyiv residents, destruction of historical and civilian buildings lies exclusively with Russia, and it must be punished for this, the Center says. 

"No manipulation, conspiracy theories, or attempts to grant civilian objects 'military status' will help the aggressor conceal another war crime," the CPD said in its statement.

The CPD's position represents the Ukrainian government's position. 

Broader pattern: two documented Russian disinformation campaigns after cultural site strikes

Russian disinformation following strikes on Ukrainian cultural sites has followed predictable patterns since 2022. Two documented precedent cases illustrate the same tactics now being deployed against Kyiv.

After the 16 March 2022 Russian airstrike on the Mariupol Drama Theater. Russia denied conducting the strike and claimed that Ukrainian soldiers had blown up the building themselves. An Associated Press investigation found that approximately 600 people died in the bombing, which makes it the deadliest single known attack on civilians in the war.

Amnesty International later concluded that the strike was a "clear war crime" conducted by two 500-kg bombs dropped from Russian fighter jets, ruling out alternative explanations.

After the 23 July 2023 Russian missile strike on the Odesa Transfiguration Cathedral, located within the UNESCO-protected historic center of Odesa, Russia's Defense Ministry denied targeting the cathedral and claimed the damage was caused by "the fall of a Ukrainian anti-aircraft guided missile," per Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 

UNESCO condemned the strike as an "escalation of violence against the cultural heritage of Ukraine." The cathedral's assistant rector, Father Myroslav, confirmed a "direct hit to the cathedral" with three altars destroyed.

The pattern across the Mariupol Theater, Odesa Cathedral, and now Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra cases is consistent: Russia denies conducting the strike and attributes damage to Ukrainian air defense or self-inflicted destruction. 

Russia set fire to the Kyiv monastery where Moscow’s founder is buried

15 June 2026 at 01:48

Russia attacks Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra

Yuriy Dolgorukiy, the prince who founded Moscow, lies buried in Kyiv — on the grounds of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra. Overnight on 15 June, a Russian missile and drone barrage set the monastery's Dormition Cathedral on fire.

The Lavra is a UNESCO World Heritage site, and carries enhanced protection under the 1954 Hague Convention's Second Protocol — a status meant to keep such places off any target list, Tetiana Berezhna noted. Striking it is "one of the gravest crimes against world cultural heritage," said Berezhna, Ukraine's deputy prime minister for humanitarian policy and culture minister.

The scramble to save the relics

Russia attacks Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra
The roof of the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra is ablaze after a Russian strike on Kyiv on 15 June 2026. Photo: Yevstratiy Zoria/Fb

The fire took hold on the roof of the Dormition Cathedral, the medieval principal church of the complex. Monks and rescuers carried out ancient icons, antimensia, and other items of "national and universal value," the Lavra's abbot, Bishop Avraamiy, said.

Emergency crews contained the blaze within safety protocols, Kyiv authorities reported. The full scale of the damage is still being assessed.

One of the largest attacks on Kyiv in months

The strike on the Lavra came during a massive overnight assault. Monitoring channels reported 27 missiles fired at the Kyiv region within an hour, and the barrage cut power to about 140,000 residents while damaging multiple residential blocks.

At least five people were injured and four hospitalized, Kyiv authorities said, with figures preliminary as the threat continued. Russia struck Kharkiv the same night, sparking fires across the city.

Russia attacks Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra
The roof of the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra is ablaze after a Russian strike on Kyiv on 15 June 2026. Photo: Yevstratiy Zoria/Fb

A monastery older than Moscow

The Lavra is older than the city whose founder it holds. Founded in 1051, it predates by nearly a century the first mention of Moscow in 1147, the year tied to Dolgorukiy. UNESCO inscribed the monastery as a World Heritage site in 1990 and added it to the List of World Heritage in Danger in 2023.

Dolgorukiy lies on the grounds at the Church of the Savior at Berestove. The Dormition Cathedral itself was destroyed in 1941 and rebuilt by independent Ukraine in 2000.

Russia strikes Ukrainian churches
Firefighters extinguish roof of the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, set ablaze after a Russian strike on Kyiv on 15 June 2026. Photo: Tetiana Berezhna/Fb

Not the first wartime strike

In January, a Russian drone damaged the entrance to the Far Caves and a nearby church — the first time since World War II that a structure of the monastery had been hit, the reserve's director said.

Metropolitan Epiphanius, head of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, wrote on X:

"As a result of Russian shelling happening right now, on the night of 15 June, the roof of one of the holiest sites in the Christian world—the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra—is on fire.

We ask for your prayers for the salvation of this holy site from destruction.

Yet another Russian crime against humanity, against history, against Christianity.

What else must the Kremlin's Antichrist do for the world to realize it must act decisively to end Russian terror against Ukraine and against the very principles of peace?

Most Holy Mother of God, stop Herod!"

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