Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 24 – Along with
the traditional Orthodox cult of Russia’s tsars, Pavel Pryanikov says, “there
is beginning actively to be developed in the Orthodox milieu now the
sanctification of Stalin,” something the Russian blogger describes as “a good
example of historical Tolkienism.”
It is only to bad that this is
beginning in the 21st century and not in the 19th when it
would have been much easier to fabricate the necessary “documents’ and thereby
“easily convince the illiterate mass of the population of the truth of such
legend mongering.” Now, it is happening in a less trusting age (facebook.com/ppryanikov/posts/2166996546678726).
In the November issue of the
Orthodox newspaper Rus Derzhavnaya,
an issue that has not yet been posted on the paper’s webpage (http://rusderjavnaya.ru/),
there is reproduced what purports to be quotations from Patriarch Aleksii II
about how Stalin became a monk of the Orthodox Church.
“This
was in 1941,” the quotation begins. “The Germans were only 40 kilometers from
Moscow. And an angel appeared unto Joseph Vissarionovich. And said: ‘Take the
tonsure, and you will save both Moscow and the entire world. Call Patriarch
Sergii.’” In 1941, of course, Sergii was not yet the patriarch but “the angel
already then called him that.”
And
Joseph Vissarionovich asked what name he should take after tonsure. And “the
angel said, ‘Your name will be Georgy.’ ‘Have Sergii come and tonsure you,’ the
angel continued.” And when the patriarch came, “Stalin asked him: ‘What will be
my service as a monk?’ The latter responded that he will serve as he has up to
then,” only dressing modestly, not eating to excess or drinking too much.
“’Only what is necessary for life.’”
And
Stalin’s new status was to be kept “’secret.’”
“How beautiful and elevated is our
history!” Prayanikov exclaims. “The Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces of
the USSR takes the tonsure under the name Geogry – and on the day of the great
martyr, Georgy the Bringer of Victory, and then on Easter, we ended the war in
Berlin!”
“The first person of the Bolshevik
state bowed his head before the truth and power of God and repented in the name
of the entire people. And Russia was forgiven although it passed through fiery
tests. Here is who is the real marshal of Victory! How great and victorious is the
Russian Orthodox tradition of combining monasticism and militarism.”
In a way, Pryanikov continues, as the
blessed Matrona of Moscow, whom Stalin saw in the same fall of 1941 and quite
possibly after he had become a monk, said, “Perhaps the Lord will forgive him.”
And he notes that there is additional “evidence” for Stalin’s change of status
in the memoirs of Yury Solovyev, the leader’s personal bodyguard.
In his 2005 book, The Kremlin from the Inside, Solovyev relates
that there was a small chapel in the Great Kremlin Palace that Stalin often
visited but always alone, apparently to “fulfill his spiritual requirements”
and clear evidence that the Soviet leader was “a believer” and not an atheist.
“If one considers the historical
personality of Stalin without any ideological filter, one can see,” Pryanikov says,
“that he was a classical empire, a real Russian tsar, the student and continuer
of the work of the tsars Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Nicholas I, and
Alexander III.”
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