Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 23 – The Kremlin and the Moscow Patriarchate both regularly claim that
despite their atheist past, almost all Russians say believers and that 80 percent
or even more of the population identify as Russian Orthodox. But a new poll by the Public Opinion Foundation
calls both of these assertions into question.
It
finds that 21 percent of Russian adults do not identify as believers and that
only 65 percent say they are Orthodox. The survey also found that seven percent
of the population identify as Muslims but fewer than one percent named any of the
other religious groups in Russia (politsovet.ru/61898-kazhdyy-pyatyy-rossiyanin-ne-schitaet-sebya-veruyuschim.html).
Women are far more likely to
identify as Orthodox than men, 71 percent as against 57 percent; but even that
71 percent is below the share the powers that be secular and religious
invariably claim. Moreover, as other
polls have shown, the share of those who visit church regularly or otherwise
practice their faith is microscopically small.
These findings and especially their
source, a polling agency with close links to the Kremlin, are intriguing
because they cast doubt on Putin’s traditionalist agenda. Indeed, they suggest
that there is far less support in the population for it that either he or
Patriarch Kirill believe.
And that in turn means that those
political leaders who favor a more secular approach or at least one that does not
tilt so heavily to Russian Orthodoxy may find more support among Russians than
they and most commentators assume.
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