Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – In declaring
the Jehovah’s Witnesses an extremist organization, Vladimir Putin’s regime is
following in the steps of Hitler and Stalin both of whom sought to extirpate
this religious group. Neither was
successful, and Putin is unlikely to be either. But his moves against it
represent another attack on religious freedom and freedom in general in Russia.
Yesterday, the Russian Supreme Court
declared the Jehovah’s Witnesses an extremist organization on the basis of a
complaint by the justice ministry, banned its continued functioning on the
territory of the Russian Federation and transferred all the property of the
religious organization to the state (vesti.ru/doc.html?id=2880003).
In Russia today, this could not have
happened without the approval of Vladimir Putin and so he must be held
accountable for an action that echoes the efforts of earlier dictators to wipe
out the Jehovah’s Witnesses, efforts that not only have been ineffectual – the
Witnesses have simply gone underground – but have been denounced as a threat to
the freedom of all.
Following the Russian court’s
decision, numerous Russian commentators pointed out both the absurdity of its
reasoning, the near certainty that the decision won’t end the activities of the
Witnesses, but the equal certainty that Moscow’s moves against them presage
further moves against other religious and civic groups.
Yegor Sedov pointedly entitled his
commentary, “Those Hitler Repressed Have Been Declared Extremists in Russia,”
and suggested those behind the case in Russia were behaving in exactly the same
way the Nazis did. At the same time, he said, the new ban is unlikely to stop
the 175,000 Witnesses in Russia (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58F90B8253182).
Other experts on religious affairs
agreed, pointing out that the Witnesses had learned how to work under
repressive regimes in Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union and would do the same
now under Putin (newsland.com/community/43/content/vsevolod-chaplin-posle-zapreta-svideteli-iegovy-uidut-v-podpole/5792226, blog.oup.com/2017/04/banning-jehovahs-witnesses-russia/
and rbc.ru/politics/20/04/2017/58f8d92e9a794731664e2c80?from=main).
And still a third group – Lev Levinson
is emblematic of its position – argued that Russians must see the attack on the
Jehovah’s Witnesses as an attack on all of them because without freedom of
conscience and religious belief, there is no religious freedom and consequently
no freedom in general (portal-credo.ru/site/?act=monitor&id=25444).
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