Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 10 – Vladimir Putin’s
effort to combine the incompatible continues unabated in his drive to promote
the idea of a single stream of Russian history: the Russian Orthodox Church of the
Moscow Patriarchate has opened a chapel on the battleship Aurora, one of the most
well-known symbols of the Bolshevik revolution.
The absurdity of this action, Sergey
Putilov writes in a commentary for the religious affairs site Portal-Credo, is obvious if one recalls
that shots from this ship, at least in the minds of most Russians because of films about those events, opened
70 years of godlessness and militant atheism in Russia (portal-credo.ru/site/?act=comment&id=2224).
Some
especially those who support the Kremlin’s current line may see this as an act
of “historical justice,” as an assertion of a role for the church even among
the revolutionaries, he continues. But it
is difficult to avoid the conclusion that “the Putin empire from its outset has
tried to combine that which cannot be combined.”
And
that in this “post-modernism,” as some say, that the fundamental weakness of
his regime is reflected rather than overcome. That is because it reflects the deep
divide between those who remain loyal to the Soviet system and denounce the
current one and those who recall the Soviet system as the most bestial of
regimes.
Lenin
is still in the mausoleum on Red Square even as the Patriarch of the Russian
Orthodox Church and Russian believers show respect to the deaths of the Imperial
Family in Yekaterinburg that the Bolshevik Party leader was responsible for,
Putilov continues. But this inherent
contradiction is not limited to such high-profile situations.
Recently,
he recounts, in the village of Chkalovsky near Moscow, Russian military veterans
put up an enormous statue of Lenin. On the very first night, it was attacked by
vandals who covered the red leader with green paint. Local KPRF members then established a round-the-clock
guard to prevent that from happening again.
Meanwhile,
in the very same village, there is an Orthodox Church named for Nicholas II
whom Lenin ordered killed. It is guarded
by so-called “Cossacks” whose real ancestors were used by the tsar to disperse
demonstrations by students and workers in pre-revolutionary Russia and who
themselves attacked demonstrators on May 5 of this year.
The American Nobel Prize winner William
Faulkner once observed that “the past wasn’t over; it wasn’t even the past.”
His words have taken on a new and absurd shape in the actions of the Putin
regime which instead of recognizing the fundamental divides that have always
existed in society is trying to paper them over.
Not
only will that not work, Putilov suggests; it will make each side angrier and
make it even more difficult to find the reconciliation that Putin and his kind
say they seek.
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