Dear Ascanio, I will surely pray for her conversion and salvation. Continue to love God, and love your wife. As others have said, schismatics have no jurisdiction, and do not have the right to demand oaths contrary to the Catholic Faith from you. But my opinion is you don't need to worry too much about any of that, for now, just in your heart, offer to God abundant prayers and supplications for the conversion and salvation of your beloved wife. You need have no undue scruple about doing that.
Consult a Traditional Catholic Priest on the subject when you can; and then God through him will lead you as to what you are to do beyond that point.
Our Lady of Fatima has promised the conversion of Russia and the return of the Orthodox to the Roman Catholic Church when that country is Consecrated to the Immaculate Heart by the Pope and the Bishops. Hopefully, we will all live to see that happy day! God only accepts and approves of working for their conversion.
Jorge Bergoglio would condemn you for this. Bergoglio's definition of "evangelization" positively precludes attempting to convert, which he calls "prosletyzing".
It shocked me when I first read this, but yeah, you're possibly right. Although some would distinguish the two. Anyway, an instruction on the Holy Office from the same:
https://www.ewtn.com/catholicism/library/on-the-ecuмenical-movement-2070The instruction on working authentically for "the only true union by the return of the dissidents to the one true Church of Christ" from H.H. Pope Pius XII: Therefore the <whole> and <entire> Catholic doctrine is to be presented and explained: by no means is it permitted to pass over in silence or to veil in ambiguous terms the Catholic truth regarding the nature and way of justification, the constitution of the Church, the primacy of jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiff, and the only true union by the return of the dissidents to the one true Church of Christ. It should be made clear to them that, in returning to the Church, they will lose nothing of that good which by the grace of God has hitherto been implanted in them, but that it will rather be supplemented and completed by their return. However, one should not speak of this in such a way that they will imagine that in returning to the Church they are bringing to it something substantial which it has hitherto lacked. It will be necessary to say these things clearly and openly, first because it is the truth that they themselves are seeking, and moreover because outside the truth no true union can ever be attained.
III—With regard especially to <mixed assemblies and conferences of Catholics with non-Catholics>, which in recent times have begun to be held in many places to promote "union" in the faith, there is need of quite peculiar vigilance and control on the part of Ordinaries. For if on the one hand these meetings afford the desired opportunity to spread among non-Catholics the knowledge of Catholic doctrine, which is generally not sufficiently known to them, yet on the other hand they easily involve no slight danger of indifferentism for Catholics. In cases where there seems to be some hope of good results, the Ordinary shall see that the thing is properly managed, designating for these meetings priests who are as well qualified as possible to explain and defend Catholic doctrine properly and appropriately. The faithful, however, should not attend these meetings unless they have obtained special permission from Ecclesiastical Authority, and this shall be given only to those who are known to be well instructed and strong in their faith. Where there is no apparent hope of good results, or where the affair involves special dangers on other grounds, the faithful are to be prudently kept away from the meetings, and the meetings themselves are soon to be ended or gradually suppressed. As experience teaches that larger meetings of this sort usually bear little fruit and involve greater danger, these should be permitted only after very careful consideration."