Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 25 – Children born
to ethnically mixed couples consisting of Tatars and ethnic Russians should be
raised as Orthodox Christians, Metropolitan Feofan of Tatarstan and Kazan says;
and if possible, this should be agreed to by the both members of the couple
before they get married (golosislama.com/news.php?id=30382).
On the one hand, this is little more
than the standard view of the leaders of all confessions, although most of them
suggest that the children should be involved in the choice. But on the other,
it represents an effort by the Moscow Patriarchate to intervene in one of the most
sensitive areas of life and to make religion more important than nationality.
In Soviet times, children of mixed
Russian and non-Russian couples almost always had their children identified as
ethnic Russians. Since 1991, however, that has changed, and where more often
parents decide to have their children identified as members of the titular
nationality of the country or republic in which they live.
As a result, in the USSR, ethnically
mixed marriages generally led to an increase in the number of ethnic Russians
in the population from one generation to another; but in post-Soviet times, the
reverse has been true particularly in non-Russian areas. The metropolitan’s intervention is clearly
intended to stem that.
But it is striking that the Russian
churchman did not refer to religiously mixed marriages where his remark might
be more anodyne but to ethnically mixed ones, suggesting that in his view as in
the view of many others, religion is the defining characteristic of ethnicity
and that to be Orthodox is to be Russian.
For some Tatars, Feofan is notorious
for his pro-ethnic Russian positions. When he assumed his post, he referred to
Kazan as “an immemorial Russian land.” He has promoted conversions of Muslims
to Orthodoxy despite the Patriarchate’s official opposition to such things.
And even more than his predecessors,
he has pushed for raising the status of the Kryashens, a ethnic community Tatar
in culture and language but Orthodox Christian in religion, demanding that
Kazan allow schools where the Kryashens live in compact majorities to be
controlled by the Kryashens rather than by Tatar officials.
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