Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 16 – The interests
of Patriarch Kirill who wants a younger and more disciplined generation of
churchmen to assume key positions in the Russian Orthodox Church and of Defense
Minister Sergey Shoygu who wants a more orderly and less contentious
relationship with the Church have led to the departure of Archpriest Dmitry
Smirnov as head of the Synod’s Department for Cooperation with the Armed
Forces.
And the exit of this always
outspoken figure may open the way for a more rapid but less contentious
promotion of a chaplaincy corps in the Russian Army, according to three
commentaries on this important change near the top of the Russian Orthodox
Church that appeared yesterday.
“Izvestiya” reported that Smirnov, head
of that department since 2001, had retired at his own request and will be
replaced by Archpriest Sergey Privalov who has been his deputy for almost the
entire time. Smirnov will now become first deputy chairman of the Patriarchal
Commission on Questions of the Family and Defense of Motherhood (izvestia.ru/news/546569).
Privalov’s elevation, the paper
suggested, appears likely to affect the style rather than the substance of the
Church’s relations with the military. The new chief was himself an officer
until August 2001 when his position in the military was eliminated in the course
of downsizing, and unlike Smirnov, he is far less outspoken.
“Nezavizimaya gazeta” suggested that
Smirnov’s outspokenness was the major reason for the change. “For many years,” it pointed out, “Smirnov
was not more for his dramatic declarations” on various subjects than “for his
achievements” in building up the chaplaincy corps in the military (ng.ru/politics/2013-03-14/1_smirnov.html).
Among
Smirnov’s comments that attracted the most attention, the paper said, was his
declaration that “Lenin was worse than Hitler,” that the best presents for a
priest were “a dacha or an automobile,” and that the name of the street in
front of his church should become “Tsarist.” Indeed, in the last case, he
personally changed the signs there.
Most
recently, the paper noted, Smirnov attracted attention for saying that no
family in Russia could survive unless it kept a gun in it home, to be used, he
suggested, if the authorities succeeded in imposing a system of juvenile
justice on the country, something many conservative Orthodox nationalists strongly
oppose.
Even
that statement might have passed without consequence if Smirnov had
accomplished more or if he had not been such a clever user of the media. Not only was he prepared to speak to the
regular media on almost any question, but he was especially adept at developing
and using the Internet to advance his views.
And in a commentary on Grani.ru,
Nikolay Mitrokhin, who has written extensively on the Russian Orthodox Church,
suggested that Smirnov’s transfer from the military department to the family
affairs commission was entirely “reasonable” given Smirnov’s oft-expressed
opposition to same-sex marriages and feminism (grani.ru/opinion/m.212582.html).
But Mitrokhin suggested that Smirnov’s
departure from military affairs was more significant than his landing in family
ones, and he argued that the archpriest’s ouster reflected both his inability
to overcome opposition within the armed forces to chaplains and one comment he
made about Shoygu last December.
After then-President Dmitry Medvedev
said in 2009 that the Russian military should have a chaplaincy corps,
Patriarch Kirill has been an enthusiastic supporter of that idea, but so far,
Mitrokhin points out, Smirnov has only been able to fill 19 of the more than
200 chaplain slots available. Perhaps a younger and less publicity-seeking
churchman will do better.
And, Mitrokhin said, Shoygu likely
hasn’t forgotten Smirnov’s public offer in December 2012 to provide the defense
minister, who happens to be a Buddhist, with a personal Orthodox priest, an
offer that the archpriest quickly and unusually had to rescind after a
firestorm of media criticism.
For the time being at least, the
church affairs analyst concluded, Archpriest Dmitry is likely to continue to
speak about on his favorite themes including support for young mothers and
their children and opposition to “liberals and Western agents.” He has to “maintain his image,” Mitrokhin
said, especially now that little remains for him “except [that].”
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