Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 2 – Moscow may or
may not get the airbase it wants in Belarus, but the Russian Orthodox Church is
training young people in that country in special “military-patriotic” clubs for
young people to be fighters for Russia and the Russian world, and these groups
may be an even greater threat to Mensk than a base would be.
That Alyaksandr Lukashenka has not
closed these things down suggests that he either doesn’t want to or may not for
one reason or another to do so, but if he is not concerned about these extreme
Russian nationalist groups, their anti-Belarusian and anti-Western attitudes,
and their possession and use of advanced weapons, others are or should be.
This week, “Nasha Niva” has
published a detailed look inside some of these 14 clubs and organizations that
exist near or in all major Belarusian cities, focusing in particular on one
such operation in the extreme western Belarusian oblast of Grodno (nn.by/?c=ar&i=158906&lang=ru and belaruspartisan.org/politic/322755/).
These “doubtful ‘military-patriotic’
clubs for youth operate under the patronage of the Orthodox Church in Belarus
and are making out of [Belarusian] school children ‘black berets’ and ‘true
children of the Holy Russian Orthodox Church,” the Belarusian journal reports.
In these camps, young people are
taught to handle weapons, to be loyal to Russia and to support the Donbas
militants. Moreover, they are shown maps “where Belarus is shown as part of Russia.”
Belarusian figures ranging from Poznyak to Shushkevich to Lukashenka are
presented as failures or traitors or worse.
Those instructing the young people
treat Belarus as an artificial creation, openly call for dividing it up, and
treat the Belarusian language with contempt. Of particular concern is the fact,
“Nasha Niva” reports, two of the instructors at the camp its journalists
visited were serving officers of the government militia.
That such camps exist in Grodno may
strike many as strange. It is “the most catholic region of Belarus, and the
share of Orthodox beievers is less than in other oblasts. But the Grodno
bishopric leads in another way: by its activity in the establishment of
so-called ‘military-patriotic’ clubs.
There are now five such clubs in
that oblast. There are nine others in or near Vitebsk, Mensk, Brest, Turov,
Berezino, Mohilev, Homel, Polotsk, and Bobruisk. Given that Belarus is a
peaceful country and that there is no threat to Orthodoxy, why are such clubs
being organized, the magazine asks.
“Nasha Niva” telephoned Archpriest
Yevgeny Pavelchuk, who is the Grodno bishopric official responsible for
relations with the military and law enforcement bodies and who oversees the
camps there. He initially refused to talk with the journalists but later agreed
to speak with them after the bishopric’s public affairs officer arranged
things.
“We teach the children patriotism,
Belarusian patriotism,” he said, “and if you evaluate this work only by
pictures on the Internet, this isn’t correct You must know the work of the
clubs from the inside. We are offended that you accuse us of what we are not
guilty. We are preparing believing citizens of Belarus.”
Pavelchuk said that it was not true
that among the instructors at these camps were Russian chauvinists. But “he
changed his tone when we reminded him of the photographic reports posted on the
site of the Cossack Spas organization.” Then he said that he “does not see
anything negative in this.”
These militarized organizations
recruit “primarily ‘difficult’ and aggressive youths,” the journal says. They
have meetings four times a week and then practice with handguns once or twice a
month in the woods. When they have
passed enough tests, they are rewarded with the right to wear black berets and
get to take part in adult military exercises, including parachuting.
Enormous sums of money are being
spent on uniforms, food, arms and so on, the jurnal continues. And it seems unlikely it is coming from Mensk
especially as the camps invariably feature Russian flags, Russian slogans, and
Russian declarations like “we are the strongest nation in the world; we are
Russians.”
The heroes of those who take place
are Nicholas II and the Russian national Demushkin, and many of those involved
see themselves as part of the RNE (Russian National Unity) organization or as
part of a Cossack group, even though the only time when there were Belarusian
Cossacks was in the 17th century in Ukraine.
“Present-day Cossack organizations
of Belarus,” “Nasha Niva” says, “are a doubtful collection of militarized
structures, not one of whom has any relationship to the real historical Cossacks.”
Instead, they are radical Russian nationalist militants of the kind the Belarusian
police earlier moved against.
“If Belarusian children at the age
of ten are handed over for ‘training’ by instructors who do not recognize the
Belarusians as a nation and who would be glad to see the liquidation of Belarus
as a state, is this not a delayed action bomb?” the journal asks – especially if
these people include serving members of the Belarusian militia.
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