Lipkivsky spent the whole period of his office as Metropolitan travelling to parishes throughout Ukraine. Under
Soviet rule the authorities at first viewed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in a positive way as a counterweight to the Russian Orthodox Church, but by the late 1920s they saw it as a dangerous expression of
Ukrainian nationalism. During his time as Metropolitan he was arrested by authorities of the Soviet government several times. The authorities often prohibited his departures from Kyiv and travel to parishes in Ukraine. Upon demands of the Soviet government, he was removed from his position as Metropolitan at the Second All-Ukrainian Orthodox Church Council in 1927. In 1927, he was placed under
house arrest, whereby his permission to depart from Kyiv and to conduct religious services in the churches of the city of Kyiv was withdrawn. His arrest in quarters continued from 1927 to 1937. Under threat of
Soviet repression, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church dissolved itself and accepted incorporation into the Russian-dominated
Moscow Patriarchate in 1930. In February 1937, Metropolitan Vasyl (Lypkivsky) was arrested by the Russian Secret Police, the
NKVD. In 1937 he was sentenced to death by the decree of an
NKVD troika, and was
executed on 27 November 1937. In 1989, he was politically "
rehabilitated" by the Soviet government. ==References==