Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 17 – In a
decision very much at odds with Moscow’s expanding anti-religious campaign, the
Russian Constitutional Court has ruled that a Rostov oblast woman had the right
to offer her home to Seventh Day Adventists to hold services, a decision that
Aleksandr Soldatov says will affect the lives of “hundreds of thousands” of
Russians.
Following a hearing on October 8 of
an appeal brought by the woman who was fined for allowing the Adventists to use
her home, the Court three days ago overruled lower courts and said that she had
the right to offer her home to religious groups for services, the commentator
reports (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2019/11/16/82756-ot-hrama-do-haty).
This is “quite a sensational” action
for Russia today where typically “ever new limitations of the rights of
believers are being introduced, if they do not belong to one of the four ‘traditional’
religious organizations,” Soldatov says, adding that the Constitution provides
followers of both “traditional” and “non-traditional” faiths the same rights.
In rejecting actions of local
officials and overruling lower courts which supported them, the Constitutional
Court employed language that is “almost philosophical” in nature, declaring
that “the life of an individual is not only a material but a spiritual
phenomenon” and that he or she must have the right to “satisfy” his spiritual
needs “including religious ones” at home.
The court did specify, however, that
an individual could not modify his residence by putting up a minaret or cross
outside, opening the door to much additional litigation; but its basic finding
will certainly be used by many Russian believers to exercise rights that have
been under threat.
“Why does this decision concern
hundreds of thousands of believers?” Soldatov asks rhetorically. Because “Russia
in the 20th century has passed through the frightening experience of
total religious oppression in the name of building an atheistic society. The
peaks of this were in the 1920s and 1930s and at the beginning of the 1960s.”
Each of these periods of oppression
led to the formation of underground “catacomb” churches; and the current wave
of repression against religion in Russia is having the same effect, Soldatov
continues. In this situation, especially
as the reputation of the Moscow Patriarchate falls, “the number of home
churches and prayer rooms will only grow.”
That means in turn both that the
nature of religious faith is changing from demonstrative behavior to personal
and alternative actions and that the decision of the Constitutional Court
represents a move to meet the needs of the believing part of Russian civil society,
the commentator concludes.
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