Oleksandr Volodymyrovych Petrovskyi was born on 9 June 1972 in
Rustavi,
Georgia. Petrovskyi comes from the nobilitated Georgian family of Nareklishvili with Armenian roots. At a young age, he moved with his mother to Ukraine, to the city of Dnipro, where he took the surname of his stepfather - Petrovskyi. In the 1990s, he earned the title of Honored Master of Sports of Ukraine in
judo, was involved in the development of martial sports in Dnipro, and took care of veterans of the Olympic movement. In 2003, he founded the International Charity Foundation "Solidarity" to support humanitarian initiatives. During the 2004 Ukrainian presidential elections, he provided support to democratic candidates, which led to persecution by the security forces. After
Viktor Yanukovych's victory in 2010, he was forced to temporarily leave Ukraine. With the start of the
Revolution of Dignity, he returned to Ukraine, where, from March 2014, he organized a Coordination Center of Public Resistance against Russian saboteurs in
Dnipro. After eliminating the threat to Dnipro from Russia in 2014, Petrovskyi participated in returning a military hospital of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, which was under mortgage to a Russian bank, to state ownership, effectively reorganizing logistics for emergency assistance to wounded soldiers of the Russian-Ukrainian war. Simultaneously, he took part in launching volunteer headquarters to support the front - through the "Solidarity" fund, equipment was supplied for the volunteer battalion "
Dnipro-1". Since 2022, he has maintained the volunteer battalion of the Ukrainian Armed Forces "Solidarity", primarily consisting of people from Georgia. Since 2016, he has focused on the development of humanitarian and religious institutions in Dnipro.
Cooperation with the Jewish community Since the 2000s, he has participated in facilitating dialogue between
Orthodox Christians and the Jewish community of Dnipro, together with
Rabbi Shmuel Kamenetsky. As a result, in 2017, a public meeting took place in the "
Menorah" center between the leader of Ukrainian Orthodox Christians, Patriarch Filaret (Denysenko), and the Jewish organizations' activists in Ukraine. He also directly invested funds in social programs of the Jewish community center "Menorah", restoring the house of the historical synagogue of
Levi Yitzchak Schneerson - now housing a boys' dormitory. In honor of the understanding between Ukrainians and Jews, the Dnipro Jewish Center "Menorah" received the world's largest silver menorah on behalf of the Petrovsky Family, becoming a relic of the entire Dnipro community.
Development of Armenian diasporic institutions Dnipro hosts one of the largest Armenian diasporas in Ukraine, which began building its own church in 2003. However, only at the beginning of 2010 was a Sunday school built with funds from Oleksandr Petrovskyi, whose grandmother was an Armenian from Tbilisi. Active construction of the church itself started in 2016 and was consecrated on March 17, 2018, by the Catholicos of the
Armenian Apostolic Church, Garegin II. The church's architects are well-known Armenians - Varuzhan Ayrapetyan, Khachik Danielyan, and Samvel Makyan. == Support of the independent Ukrainian Orthodox Church ==