Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 30 – Commentators in
Moscow and the West ever more frequently draw parallels between Vladimir Putin’s
ideas and actions and those of fascist regimes in the first part of the 20th
century, but few have focused on the fact that one of the Kremlin leader’s
most-cherished ideas, that of the “Russian Spring,” was invented by a Russian
fascist in the 1920s.
In a blog post
today, Pavel Pryannikov corrects that gap, pointing out that “the ‘Russian
Spring’ in fact is not an invention of the present time” but rather that this “synthesis
of fascism, Stalinism, Russian Nationalism and Orthodoxy” was invented by
Aleksandr Kazem-Bek, a leading theoretician of Russian fascism in the 1920s (ttolk.ru/?p=21214).
While the more familiar Eurasian
movement represented the first attempt to “combine corporatist (proto-fascist)
and Bolshevik ideas,” he writes, “far more popular” among White Russians were
the ideas of the Young Russians (“Mladorossy”) whose intellectual leader was
Aleksandr Kazem-Bek.
The descendent of an aristocratic
family which came from Persia to Russia in the early 19th century,
Kazem-Bek was “completely Russified.” He fought in the White Army and in 1920
at the age of 18 fled to Europe. There in 1923, he founded the Young Russia
Union and served as its chief ideologist.
The group in his view was to promote
“a certain new type of totalitarian monarchy, the struggle against masonry and
international capital and also a life ‘full of blood, fire, and self-sacrifice.’”
In Kazem-Bek’s view, Russia should have a regime like Mussolini’s in Italy but
be fully committed to the promotion of “’Russianness.’”
Not only were his ideas derived from
fascism, but Kazem-Bek adopted many fascist external features: a uniform, military
discipline, and a cult of the leader. He insisted that the old Russia had died
because of its corruption and that the Soviet revolution, which a catastrophe,
was also “an apocalypse” which “cleansed” the Russian nation.
Kazem-Bek increasingly viewed Stalin
as an exemplar of the kind of leader he believed Russia should have, and he
insisted that what Russia needed was a combination of Russian autocracy and
Bolshevism or as he put it in one of his slogans, “a tsar and soviets” at one
and the same time.
His ideas attracted support among
some of the Romanovs and other members of the nobility in emigration. But they
and he also attracted the attention of the Soviet secret police, and by the
middle 1930s, Kazem-Bek was assumed by many to be a collaborator with the NKVD,
all the more so when he declared that Young Russia was a “second” Soviet party.
Throughout his émigré career,
Kazem-Bek was withering in criticism of “European values.” He insisted that “Russia is not a competitor
of Europe; it is its successor” and has the right to dispense with anything
harmful in the European tradition. “We
are not only Europeans,” he wrote; “we are Russians. That is something European
chauvinists cannot forgive us for.”
After Mussolini formed his alliance
with Hitler in 1939, Kazem-Bek broke with the Italian government and moved to
France. By that point, his ideology could be described as “Russian Orthodox
Stalinism.” After Germany occupied
France, the Young Russia leader fled to the
United States.
There he began to work with the
Russian Orthodox Church and especially with its Moscow Patriarchate wing. And
in 1957, Kazem-Bek returned to Moscow where he worked in the Moscow
Patriarchate’s Department for External Church Relations, which always had close
ties with the KGB and out of which the current patriarch came.
While in that job, Kazem-Bek
frequently met with Patriarch Aleksii, Metropolitan Nikolay and other senior
churchmen. He lived in Ministry of
Defense housing. When he died in February 1977, he was buried in Peredelkino
and among those who spoke at his funeral was Archpriest Nikolay Gundyayev, the
elder brother of Patriarch Kirill.
At that time, Father Nikolay
Gundyayev said “we must not only remember Kazem-Bek but study him.” Since the
latter’s death, the Moscow Patriarchate has done so. In 2002, on the centenary
of Kazem-Bek’s death, Vsevolod Chaplin was among those who took part in a
conference on the Young Russia leader.
Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov),
who has been a spiritual advisor to Putin, is known to highly value Kazem-Bek’s
ideas, Pryannikov says. And it is probably through him that the ideas of a
Russian fascist of the 1920s have come to the attention and affected the
thinking of the current Kremlin leader.
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