The fact remains that Eucharistic Benediction and/or Adoration in the Eastern Churches (at least those of the Byzantine tradition) is a Latinization. The practice grew out of the historical situations peculiar to the West and within a theological and liturgical framework that made sense in the West. As I mentioned in a previous post, it was actually an outgrowth of the elevation of the newly consecrated Host during the Mass. People wanted more time to gaze upon the Sacred Species, so priests began to reserve it in a special monstrance. Over time rites developed around this reservation.
The adoption of such practices among Eastern Catholics, according to Korolevsky in his fantastic essay
Uniatism, came in part out of a sense of inferiority to Roman Catholics, as well as a desire to “prove” to Roman Catholics that Eastern Catholics are Catholic too. This was particularly the case in boarder countries such as Ukraine, where the Polish Roman Catholics held Eastern Catholics under a great deal of suspicion for “not being Catholic enough.” Politically the Polish Roman Catholics often believed that Eastern Catholics’ loyalties lay with Russia.

For this reason many Ukrainian Catholics were martyred by their Roman Catholic brethren.

So in an attempt to “prove” that they were really Catholic, many Ukrainian Catholics adopted Roman practices such as Adoration/Benediction, **“Low Mass,”
Sanctus bells, etc., etc., etc. But you don’t have to take my word for it. Read Uniatism. Fr. Korolevsky is was very well acquainted with the situation not only through extensive academic study, but also through extensive first-hand experience.