Paul Goble
Staunton, June 24 – Even as
commentators in Moscow continue to debate whether the new Russian world should
be based on the Soviet system or alternatively on the tsarist one, some
Russians in the Donbas are reaching back to pre-Christian ideas and practices
in the hopes of coming up with a definition that all Russians will come to
accept.
And while their numbers are not
large, at least not yet, they set a tone which is anti-Semitic, anti-modern and
anti-intellectual that casts a far larger and darker shadow on those with whom
they associate, a trend not unknown to those who have studied what happened in
Russia during the Civil War and elsewhere during equally serious periods of
upheaval.
In “Novaya gazeta” yesterday,
journalist Yekaterina Fomina provides a glimpse into this typically hidden
world of those who would restore pre-Christian paganism using the most modern
of technologies, the Internet, and who believe non-Aryans are “reptilian” and
should be destroyed (novayagazeta.ru/society/68933.html?print=1).
According to Fomina, only about 1.5
percent of Russians say they follow the pre-Christian faiths of their
ancestors. But because these pagans believe among other things that people can
be only priests, farmers, or warriors, many of them are drawn to wherever there
is fighting – and hence the share of such people is far higher on the Russian
side in the Donbas.
In some places in the Russian
Federation, such as Novosibirsk, the pagans are a well-organized sect; but in
most, they are scattered and the followers of this most traditional of faiths
which involves the worship of nature and spirits find one another via Facebook
pages or online sites.
Those who have gone to fight in the Donbas
form groups who celebrate the ancient gods and promote their ideas which
include the notions that the Ukrainian leadership consists predominantly of
Jews – President Petro Poroshenko according to their lights is a Jew named Valtsman
-- and that Russians as Aryans are superior to all other peoples.
Many of those in the pro-Moscow
forces there say they were once “nominal” Christians but have now found their
true faith and calling by fighting in the Donbas, Fomina reports. They vary on many things but are united by “the
odious ideal of the superiority of the Slavs and sometimes more broadly of the
Aryan race.”
The main enemies of Russians, these
new pagans believe, are “’the reptiloids,’” a term they use to refer to other
nations who supposedly have intermarried with animals and then risen to dominant
whole peoples. Such humanoids must be
wiped from the earth, according to the pagan thinking if the deserving are to
flourish.
The Russian Orthodox Church refuses
to have much to do with these people except to condemn them, but some like
Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin have called for conducting “’enlightenment’ work”
with them. That doesn’t bother the
pagans who like to keep their distance from anything they see as linked to the
political system.
One pagan said debating with
officials or clergy online is a waste of time and told Fomina he “doesn’t like
democracy. Instead, [he] prefers a traditional structure consisting of priests,
warriors and peasants.” He’s for “this structure at the level of a single
village or an entire empire. That isn’t important” -- although he added quickly
that he “likes an empire.”
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