Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 18 – In Soviet times
when religious belief was persecuted, the differences between believers and
unbelievers was enormous, so great indeed that many felt that the recovery of religious
faith by Russians after 1991 would lead to a transformation of their society
and country.
But a new study conducted by the Institute
of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences finds that “in their
misconceptions, their views on good and evil and their hopes for a better future
for their country, Russia’s believers and atheists are identical,” according to
Yekaterina Dobrynina of “Rossiiskaya gazeta” (rg.ru/2015/04/15/religia-nauka.html).
The survey of 4,000 Russians found
that 69 percent of them identify as Orthodox, five percent as Muslims, six
percent believe in “a higher power” but don’t identify with any particular
religion, two percent say they are members of other religious faiths, and ten
percent identify as atheists. But that
division hardly ends the story, the sociologists say.
Thus, for example, 87 percent of the
Orthodox believe in God as to 89 percent of Muslims and 50 percent of other
faiths. But 12 percent of the self-proclaimed atheists also believe in God. How
the faithful cannot and how the atheists can remains very much a mystery,
Dobrynina says.
Many believers combine their official
faith with superstitions of all kinds. Half of the Orthodox and a third of the Muslims
believe in signs, and every third or fourth member of these faiths believes in
witchcraft and magic. As far as life after death is concerned, 32 percent of
the Orthodox, 27 percent of the Muslims, and five percent of the atheists do.
According to the journalist, “sociologists
do not see anyting unusual” in this pattern. People in most countries
regardless of their faith choose “a mixed ‘salad’ of at times mutually
inconsistent ingredients” on the basis of their national and religious
traditions. And within any country, “the views of religious and non-religious
people correspond on key state issues.”
More than half of all believers (53 to
57 percent) consider the state to be their chief defender, as do 49 percent of
atheists. More than two-third say one must never ignore moral norms even if one
benefits by doing so, while those willing to violate the to get ahead are
somewhat fewer but only a little among believers than among non-believers.
There is no fundamental
difference between the two groups about the state, although the religious and
the non-religious rank institutions somewhat differently, with all putting the president
first but then differing in their ordering of the government, the military and
so on just below him.
Important too is the fact that there is
little difference between religious and non-religious groups in terms of their
professed willingness to support opposition groups: six percent of the Orthodox,
ten percent of the Muslims and five percent of the atheists say they are
prepared to back opposition candidates and parties.
Orthodox Russians are somewhat more inclined
than others to support Moscow’s actions such as the annexation of Crimea. 82 percent of them say they back that move,
compared to 72 percent of Muslims. One
place where believers and unbelievers do divide is in their choice of
information sources: Orthodox Russians trust government media; atheists used the
Internet.
All groups are almost equally patriotic, and all expect the state
to provide social justice, with the Muslims somewhat more insistent on that
than are other groups. The Orthodox say that for them it is more important to restore
national traditions and values; for the other faithful and the atheists, that is
less important.
Commenting on these results, Mariya Mchedlova, head of the
Institute of Sociology’s Center for Religion in Contemporary Society, did point
to one key difference between the Orthodox and Muslims that she suggests could
be worrisome: Muslims feel much greater irritation with the world around them
than do the Orthodox.
She says that it is “now very important not to allow radical
Islamist activists and movements to use this emotional state for their own
purposes,” something she said other Russians “are very much afraid of.”
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