Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 16 – With some sad exceptions, most Russian Orthodox hierarchs and priests
who cooperated with the Soviet security agencies did so to show loyalty and help
the church, according to Metropolitan Tikhon of Pskov, who said that he had
been approached by the KGB in 1989 but refused, something perestroika made
possible.
Tikhon,
widely viewed as Vladimir Putin’s favorite in the church hierarchy and thus the odds’ on favorite to
succeed Patriarch Kirill, made that remark in the course of a long interview he
gave to Jaanus Piirsalu of Estonia’s Postimees
newspaper (rus.postimees.ee/6524228/otec-tihon-ponimaet-svyashchennikov-sotrudnichavshih-s-kgb-radi-cerkvi-nado-bylo-proyavlyat-loyalnost).
The Soviet Union “was a state with
an atheist ideology,” he says. “Priests and believers understood that to
preserve church services, schools and their culture, an individual had to
remain loyal to the political system. The overwhelming majority of believers
lived without staining their conscious by betrayal and subordinating themselves
to evil.”
“This is obvious to every objective
researcher,” the metropolitan continued, “although there were some sad exceptions.”
Tikhon says that his own spiritual
father had to write denunciations to the KGB’s predecessor in the early 1950s. “But
thank God, these were relatively rare cases.
There are many examples among hierarchs, especially now, when materials
of their cases have become accessible which on the contrary defended the
interests of the church and believers.”
Consider Patriarch Aleksii II, who
was closely linked to Estonia, Tikhon continues. So much abuse has been heaped on
him, but when he was metropolitan in Estonia, “he could not refuse to cooperate
with the state administration for religious affairs, which itself was part of
the security system. By cooperating, he saved
many church institutions and many believers.
Had Aleksii refused, Tikhon says,
the church would have lost a great deal. Nonetheless, other religious leaders
had the possibility of refusing without such consequences and many did. The
metropolitan adds that he was approached by the KGB in 1989 but “simply said ‘no.’
In this there was nothing heroic as this was already at the end of the 1980s”
and things had changed.
Among many other observations Tikhon
made, the following stand out:
·
General
Vlasov who cooperated with Hitler was a traitor but one cannot say that all
those who worked for him were.
·
Russia
today resembles the first half of the rule of Alexander III. “Russia then also
was under sanctions” by the West after the Crimean War.
·
Russia
is fated to be an empire, but “an empire and imperialism are completely different
things.” An empire is simply a country where many different peoples are ruled
by a single center. “Whether one likes this or not, Russia by its structure is
an imperial state. This is not the occasion for pride or stupid vanity.”
·
Metropolitan
Tikhon says that he considers it “absolutely correct” that the ROC MP is not “a
state church.”
·
Any
state, including a democratic one, will seek to weaken the church in order to
boost its own power. “The church must always be prepared for this.” At the same
time, “the church cannot and must not interfere in government affairs.” It can
and must, however, express its views on important questions.
·
Many
have called Tikhon an anti-Westerner, but he says that he “doesn’t consider
himself one.”
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