Paul Goble
Staunton, October 30 – Stalin made
up the difference between the production of copper in the USSR in the 1930s and
the needs of Soviet industrialization during that decade by confiscating the
bells of Russian Orthodox churches, an economic requirement that gave an added
impetus to Bolshevik anti-religious activities.
In 1931, the Tolkovatel portal
notes, the Soviet economy needed 60,000 tons of copper but Soviet mines
produced only 27,000. To make up the difference, Stalin went after church bells
which included some 250,000 tons of copper in them (ttolk.ru/articles/tserkovnyie_kolokola_-_na_stroyki_industrializatsii).
That covered the
deficit in production for the entire decade but only at the price of the
destruction of one of the loveliest parts of Russia’s architectural and
religious heritage.
The size of this
campaign is reflected in the following statistic: In 1930-31 alone, the Soviet
authorities confiscated from the Trinity-Sergiyev lavra 19 bells weighting a
total of 130 tons; and officials calculated that with each parish church closed
in Moscow, they could count on getting at least a ton of copper.
The entire effort
was promoted by an ideological campaign to “transform bells into cars and
tractors” – for examples of this, see vecherniyorenburg.ru/cat181/show4102/ -- one that explicitly suggested that while Russians
might never again hear the sound of bells, they would benefit from Soviet
industrialization.
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