Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 20 – Russians have seldom
viewed Roman Catholicism as part of their national tradition, and the Kremlin
today does not include that faith in its list of “traditional” religions. But now the Vatican has taken a major step
forward to “nativizing” the church in Russia by appointing a native-born Russian
bishop.
That may seem like a small thing,
but until now, even after 1991, all the hierarchs and most of the priests serving
Roman Catholics in Russia are
non-Russians from other countries. The current ruling archbishop, Paolo Pezzi,
for example, is an Italian. Now, for the
first time, he has a Russian deputy.
On July 30, the Vatican named
Nikolay Dubinin, 47, to be auxiliary bishop of Moscow and thus deputy head of
the Catholic Church in Russia. He has
now given an interview in which he describes how he rose to his current
post (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/08/21/86767-teper-dveri-katolicheskoy-tserkvi-otkryty-dlya-vseh).
Born in Rostrov Oblast to a Catholic
mother and an Orthodox father and a graduate in 1993 of the Catholic Higher
Spiritual Seminary in Moscow, Dubinin joined the Fransciscans and received most
of theological education in Poland. But
in 2004, he was made a priest by Archbishop Tadeus Kondrusevic, the current
head of the Catholic Church in Belarus.
When he was growing up, Dubinin
tells religious affairs journalist Aleksandr Soldatov, “showing your
religiosity was not secure.” Moreover, he couldn’t easily follow his mother’s
faith because the nearest Catholic church was “on the order of a thousand
kilometers away.” Consequently, he was baptized Orthodox.
When he and his mother visited
relatives in Belarus during the summers, however, he did attend Catholic services
there; and later, he joined a newly-restored Catholic church in Rostov where he
had the spiritual encounter that changed his life direction, Kondrasevic
visited, dedicated a statue of Jesus which lacked hands and said Dubinin must
be “Christ’s hands.”
A year later, he ended the just
opened Moscow Catholic Seminary and then went to Poland for further training.
Dubinin tells Soldatov that he doesn’t know why the Vatican chose him or
whether there were any conversations between the Catholics and the ROC MP about
this choice.
Dubinin says that he will assist Pezzi
with the supervision of the widespread Catholic church in Russia but has no
plans to engage in proselytism among Russians.
He is giving up his work as head of the Franciscan publishing house in
Russia but will not move from St. Petersburg to Moscow.
Asked about his breakthrough
appointment, the new bishop says that until there there haven’t been any ethnic
Russian bishops, although, he points out, there have been bishops from other nations
indigenous to Russia. But if he is minimizing his new status, Russians both
religious and political are unlikely to.
This status will make it more
difficult for the Kremlin to continue to exclude Roman Catholicism from the “traditional”
faiths, although it is more likely to lead to the demise of that categorization
than to its enlargement; and it may help open the way for a papal visit to
Russia, although that too remains problematic given opposition from
conservatives in the ROC MP.
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