Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 10 – Vasily Yakemenko,
organizer of Nashi and other pro-Kremlin youth groups, says that Russia will never
be a democracy because it is Orthodox rather than Protestant, a difference in
faith that prefigures differences in culture and politics, predisposing
Protestant countries to democratic arrangements and Orthodox ones to authoritarian
regimes.
Democracy in the West arose out of
Protestantism because that branch of Christianity is “based on dialogue and
unending conversations, with God, with those near and far,” he says. People
there are “accustomed to speak, listen and be listened to … As a result, they
learned to reach agreement among themselves and with the state” (t.me/yakemenko/2417).
In Protestant churches, the minister
faces the congregation. He leads but everyone sings and there is “created a space
for dialogue. No one shines more brightly than the rest, none is higher than any
other,” Yakemenko says. But “with us, it is entirely different” first in church
and then in political life.
“The priest serves with his back to the
congregate, and the altar is closed. He leads and we follow him … he enters a
different space, inaccessible for us, and we calmly wait his appearance. He
serves, the choir sings, and we follow in silence.”
In the Protestant West, “everyone
thinks ‘I could become president.’ With us, people think ‘I never will become
president.’” People believe that a president like a tsar must be born to the
role, that “this is a special place before God.” And that view remains, and it is
why no one views elections as important: what good is it to vote on someone God
has ordained for the role?
All this informs and is reinforced by the
requirement of ruling such a large and diverse country, Yakemenko says; and it
is reinforced as well by those occasions when those in charge refuse to rule in
a tough manner but try to be agreeable. That has happened several times in
Russian history, most recently in the 1990s. And it was disastrous.
Expanding the number of people involved in
governance in Russia is always a mistake: a small group around the ruler can
make good decisions; the current Duma with its hundreds of deputies can’t, the
activist and commentator says. And recognizing this, one must also recognize
that Russia will never be a democracy and never should.
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