The relations between Pope Pius X and Russia were difficult, and the situation of Polish Catholics in Russia did not improve.
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Tsar Nicolas issued a decree February 22, 1903, promising religious freedom for the Catholic Church, and, in 1905, promulgated a constitution, which included religious freedom,[1]
The Russian Orthodox Church nevertheless felt threatened and insisted on stiff interpretations. Papal degrees were not permitted and contacts with the Vatican remained outlawed.
A religious movement the Mariavites, supported and financed by Russia, began to gain ground among the Polish faithful, although the Pope had condemned it in 1907.[2] In his encyclical Tribus Circiter Pope Pius wrote to the episcopate, warning against national radicals and asks for peace and order.[3]
In 1907 he signed an agreement, which prescribes mandatory Russian history and literature courses in Catholic seminaries in Polish Russia, in exchange for greater rights for the faithful.[2]
The publication of the Apostolic letter Ea Semper, which dealt with the Eastern Rite Catholics in the United States, led to a number of defections to the Russian Orthodox Church in America.
Afterwards, he felt betrayed by the Russians who did not ease the conditions of Polish faithful: At his last public reception of the Diplomatic Corps, Pope Pius X publicly told the Russian ambassador Nelidoff,
As a surprised Nelodoff disagreed, the Pope rose from his throne and asked the ambassador to leave the room.[4]