Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 26 – Today on the
191st anniversary of the Decembrist uprising in 1825, Eurasianist
leader and Putin crony Aleksandr Dugin has attacked those who took part as “Masonic”
enemies of “their own people, the powers, the faith and the tsar,” a reminder
of just how difficult the year ahead will be as Russia marks the centenaries of
the revolutions of 1917.
In Soviet times, Dugin says, the
Decembrists “were presented as bearers of progress and advanced ideas, and as
fighters against the autocracy and supporters of democracy” whose only failure
was the “bourgeois” one of not using
enough force and violence to achieve their ends (politobzor.net/show-117545-dekabristy-vosstali-protiv-svoego-naroda-derzhavy-very-i-carya.html).
“In fact,” the Eurasianist
says, “the Decembrists were a Masonic sect which arose on the model of European
Masonic lodges and with the very same goals – the undermining of traditional
empires, the destruction of the Christian tradition and its replacement by the
secular atheistic and Masonic cult … and the transfer of power from the clergy
and aristocracy to the urban bourgeoisie.”
Dugin continues: “The Russian
Decembrists planned the murder of the tsar, the coming to power of a military
junta, and the establishment of a Republic on the model of the US.” Its members
were “closely connected with Polish Masons,” to whom the Decembrists planned to
give independence and large portions of Russian lands.
In short, he suggests, this criminal
conspiracy “copied Western and especially American models” and wanted to “transform
unique Orthodox Russian society into a copy of European nation states with a
bourgeois-republican oligarchic system … a liberal dictatorship which would
destroy to the roots everything Russian, Orthodox and autocratic.”
“No one is saying,” Dugin continues,
“that there weren’t problems in Russian society and that nothing needed to be
done.” In fact there were many, including serfdom, “but to kill the tsar,
destroy the church, and hand over imperial territories to the devil knows whom”
were not appropriate and cannot be forgiven.
The Decembrists, which he dismisses “as
a group of terrorist conspirators,” only got as far as they did by “deceiving
simple soldiers that the Constitution they backed was the wife of Grand Duke
Constantine.” Fortunately, he says, “they were stopped, disarmed and seized” in
a timely fashion. Even “the dreamy tsar Aleksandr I” had banned Masonry three
years earlier.
“For loyal Russian conservatives,
for every full-blooded Russian man … the Decembrists are pure evil, their
memory is accused, and their actions shameful,” Dugin says. Moreover, he argues, “if we don’t view a
terrorist as a terrorist, a murderer as a murderer and an agent of influence as
an agent of influence, we risk that all these crimes will be repeated again and
again.”
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