Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 8 – Last Friday night in prime time, Moscow’s REN-TV presented what it
says was a documentary about the sinking of the Titanic in 2012 that suggested
that the sinking of the ship was the result of a Masonic conspiracy with, in the
words of one viewer, “a clearly expressed anti-Semitic subtext.”
Aleksey
Zheleznev suggests that this represented “a reanimation in Russia of ‘The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” a vicious anti-Semitic forgery that animated
the Russian far right at the end of the imperial period and retains support
among Russian marginal to this day (grimnir74.livejournal.com/7380359.html and cursorinfo.co.il/news/xussr/2016/08/07/-v-rossii-reanimirovali-protokoli-sionskih-mudrecov/).
The
Moscow television show, he points out, was a remake of a film prepared for the
centenary of the loss of the Titanic in 2012. That film suggested that a
shadowy “Group of 300” consisting of Jews, Masons and Illuminati had sunk the
ship in order to provoke chaos and bring to power “a universal government’”
controlled by themselves.
The
notion that such a conspiracy existed, of course, was a central theme of “The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion” and completely absurd. But when REN-TV showed
it in 2012, it spoke about all this in the past tense, as something that had
happened in the years before World War I and therefore quite distant from today’s
world.
What
makes the new showing disturbing, Zheleznev says, is that the revised version
of the film shown at the end of last week drops any reference to this time
frame and thus presents this “content” outside of time and thus important for
the present day, especially since it links the sinking of the Titanic to more
recent events.
Among
these, the Russian writer says, are “the diversion at the Chernobyl nuclear power
plant in 1986, the destruction of the USSR in 1991, and the blowing up of the
twin towers in New York in 2001, “in which,” according to the film’s writers, “Arab
terrorists were unjustly accused.”
“The
goal of these horrific crimes,” the film suggests in Zheleznev’s words, “is to
fright people and to transform them into an obedient herd condemned to
subordination or destruction.”
According
to “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” this conspiracy was hatched in 1897
at the First Zionist Congress. The pamphlet itself appeared in 1903 and was
given wide distribution in Russia even though it was denounced as crude
anti-Semitic forgery by many Russians.
What
is worrisome, Zheleznev says, is that once again, the ideas in this forgery are
being disseminated by the Russian media – and this time by the far more
powerful and influential Russian television which surveys show many Russians
now accept not only as reflecting the views of the Kremlin but as necessarily
true.
This
television program comes on the heels of another event in Russia that is of
concern. A United Russia Duma deputy,
Mikhail Starshinov, has called for reestablishing state control over “the
quality of religious education and preaching,” arguing that the USSR offers “a
positive case” in this regard.
Aleksandr
Boroda, the president of the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia, says
that he is extremely worried about what this would mean for religious life in
Russia and because it appears that this proposal has a Kremlin imprimatur (cursorinfo.co.il/news/xussr/2016/07/31/v-rossii-vvoditsya-gosudarstvenniy-kontrol-nad-prepodavaniem-tori/).
In a Federation press release, the
rabbi says that what Starshina seeks is the “de facto restoration of the Soviet
‘Council on Religious Affairs’” which exercised “total control over religious
life” and which was often involved in anti-Semitic outrages (mjcc.ru/news/kommentariy-prezidenta-feor/).
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