Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 19 – In a
disturbing echo of how the tsarist authorities used nominally independent
Orthodox nationalist black hundreds organizations to go after opponents of the imperial
government, Orthodox “pogromists” are now doing exactly what OMON officers did
against the Bolotnaya demonstrators in 2012.
That should be a matter of concern
because it gives Russian officials plausible deniability of non-involvement at
least with the credulous in Russia and the West if there is a backlash against
these groups even as it allows the Kremlin great scope for deploying them
against its enemies and creating a climate of fear among the population about
taking part in protests.
But as Russian cultural specialist
Elena Volkova tells “Novaya gazeta,” the danger this represents to Russian
society is even greater because increasingly the Orthodox radicals feel
themselves empowered not only by God but by the state and thus are adopting
ever more radical views and taking ever more radical actions (novayagazeta.ru/society/69592.html).
She said that she has no doubt that
the Kremlin “welcomes” what the Orthodox radicals did against the art exhibit
last week. “And what are they doing? They are doing in principle the very same
thing that the OMON officers did … dispersing people engaged in peaceful
protest, beating them, and then accusing them of beating the OMONites and putting
them in prison.”
That works to the benefit of the
Kremlin, Volkova continues. Enteo and the orther Orthodox radicals “understand
perfectly well that the powers need them, that people must be kept in fear, and
that any growths of free expression must be extirpated or suppressed in order
to show who here in this house is the master.”
“In this house,” such people
believe, “we are the masters, illegal pogromchiki who speak in the name of God.”
The Moscow Patriarchate shares
responsibility for all this with the authorities, because “it has created the ideological
justification” for such actions. And that is the danger: with such a justification,
there is no limit to what these people might do, especially given that the authorities
and the church cannot exist without each other: they are Siamese twins.”
(Volkova does not cite it, but one
article by an Orthodox radical nationalist this week goes so far as to say that
a state of human laws is definition a departure from the the laws of Christ, therefore
illegitimate and thus not deserving of respect in any sense (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2015/08/14/pravovoe_obwestvo_eto_uklonenie_ot_hrista/).)
What happened last week, Volkova
says is “a development of what began in 2003 when Father Aleksandr Shargunov
sent his altar boys to destroy the “Careful, Religion!” exhibit.” Those who went were initially detained by the
police for the violent act, then released, and finally given awards.
In the intervening period, that has
become a pattern, and Volkova says she expects the same outcome after last week’s
events. Enteo will probably get a state award, although she expresses doubt
that his medal will be inscribed “for a successful conduct of a pogrom” against
enemies of the state.
“Already in the 1990s,” Volkova
continues, “the church willingly gave agreement to be the metropolitburo (thus
Father Gleb Yakunin called the church), that is, to serve as the ideological
department of the state where Orthodoxy is a political religion and
totalitarian ideology in which there remains the values of the communist
political religion of Marxism-Leninism.”
It is possible to call this
combination, the culture specialist says, “a communist world in Christian
clothing.”
This involvement of religion in
politics has some serious consequences, she continues. “Earlier we were better
as a Soviet country, now we are better as an Orthodox one. ‘We are surrounded
by a hostile world. Earlier, it was capitalist; now it is heretical, Catholic,
Protestant or something else.
“That is,” she says, “’we are the
light surrounded by darkness.’ “ Under socialism, the class struggle
intensified; now, “the struggle with enemies of the church, with heretics and
the godless, is intensifying as well,” something that is becoming increasingly
obvioius as “all enemies are demonized as Satanists.”
This new church-state ideology
presents sees itself as something broader than even Soviet ideology. “Soviet
ideology was planetary: ‘Proletarians of all countries, unite!’” This new one is “cosmic because ‘God is
behind us,’ ‘we are saving the true faith,’ and ‘we speak in the name of God.’”
Moreover, Volkova says, “the
authorities are attempting to make Orthodoxy a national idea,” even though
there are very few genuinely Orthodox people: fewer than one in ten practices
the faith, but 80 percent call themselves Orthodox because to say one is
Orthodox is now to identify as “belonging to the majority” and thus “worthy of
trust.”
“Many people,” she continues, “easily
shifted from Soviet ideology to Orthodoxy. They considered Soviet ideology in a
purely formal manner.” One declared oneself a supporter of the party because
that was required. Now, people are doing the same thing with Orthodoxy, something
that does not benefit the true faith.
Instead, Volkova says, it makes the
church into a group of people who simply feel compelled to be on the side of the
powers that be. “Some calculate in the following way: ‘the authorities now
support Orthodoxy;” and thus they conclude that they must say they are part of
that as well.
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