ANTI-CATHOLIC CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA
February 28, 2002, Moscow, 8.50 AM
I thought the scandal with Pope's "aggression"
is over, but it continues. Now different "intellectual leaders" or as
they are called in Russia "actors of culture" signed a petition blaiming
Vatican "for the continuation of the spiritual expansion to Russia."
Most of these people are very old (some are older than 90 years), most of them
had signed the similar petitions against dissidents in 1970-s. They are "Soviet
intellectuals", fed by government. Painter (bad painter) Ilya Glazunov, ballerina
Olga Lepeshinskaya, singer Liudmila Zykina, actors Tatyana Doronina, Michael Ulyanov,
Vladimir Zeldin, Moiseyev, Boris Pokrovsky (these became famous in mid-1930-s)...
Old Guards are still alive! And at least one of them have some power: N.Nikandrov,
the president of the governmental "Russian Academy of Education."
RUSSIANS AND CATHOLICS
By Lawrence Uzzell(in First Things - www.firstthings.com , October
2002).
To sense the full historical weight of Russian attitudes toward the Roman Catholic
Church one should see the 1930s film "Aleksandr Nevski"-the Stalinist
take on medieval Russia's triumph over the Teutonic Knights. The film demonizes
Roman Catholicism as inherently alien and hostile to Russia, and also as an integral
part of German imperialism. Though many Russians now have more nuanced views,
most still have trouble with the concept of Christianity as a universal faith:
deep down they don't believe that a Catholic can ever be truly Russian, or a German
(or American) truly Orthodox.
Even Russians friendly to Rome see it as essentially other, essentially un-
Russian-indeed, that is precisely what attracts them. Certain elements of the
Russian intelligentsia tend to romanticize everything western, including both
western modernism and western fundamentalism. In some Orthodox parishes in Moscow,
both liberal Episcopalians and conservative southern Baptists can count on a warm
welcome merely because they come from America. Sometimes simplistically, such
Russians associate both Protestantism and Roman Catholicism with democracy, capitalism
and the western way of life in general. In a sense they agree with their xenophobic
countrymen who depict the Vatican as the spiritual counterpart of McDonald's.
Not surprisingly, every word that these westernizers speak in support of the Catholics
infuriates the xenophobes all the more.
Many Roman Catholics in western Europe and America want to reach out to the
Orthodox Church because they are looking for reinforcements for the traditionalist
wing within their own confession. They would be unpleasantly surprised to find
that in Russia it is not the traditionalist Orthodox clergy who are most drawn
to Rome but the progressives: the tiny minority most sympathetic to the World
Council of Churches, radical liturgical reforms, and modernist views on issues
such as birth control. What the progressives hope to see is just what the traditionalist
Orthodox fear: that a reunion of eastern and western Christianity would not reverse
modernism in the west but simply spread it to the east. They may well be right.
Such theological concerns, however, are not the most formidable obstacles to
the Vatican in Russia. For most Russians anti-Catholicism is primarily a matter
of cultural identity; in the national psyche anti-Catholic feeling is much more
deeply rooted than anti-Protestant. Though doctrinal disagreements with the Protestants
are manifestly wider than with the Roman Catholics, Russians are not obsessed
with memories of their wars against Protestant powers such as Sweden. The 17th-century
Polish occupation of Moscow, by contrast, absorbs them as if it had happened just
last week. Like Protestants in Victorian England or the 1950s American Bible Belt
commemorating the defeat of the Spanish Armada, they recall the Polish invasion
as an attack on their entire civilization--both political and religious. Many
view such episodes as the Pope's recent "virtual visit" to Moscow by
television as a resumption of that invasion by other means. (The greatest advantage
that John Paul II's successor will have over him in dealing with Russia is that
presumably he will not be Polish.)
Opinion surveys consistently find that about half of ethnic Russians identify
themselves as "Orthodox Christians," though only about 5 percent regularly
attend church services. (The ethnic Polish, Lithuanian and German minorities within
the Russian Federation are similarly lax in their practice of Roman Catholicism.)
The Russian Orthodox Church thus faces a standing temptation to pander to the
politics of ethnic identity. When I lived in Moscow in the 1990s, Orthodox anti-abortion
leaders seriously debated whether it would taint their movement to allow Roman
Catholics and Protestants to join. (The right side won, narrowly.)
In a conversation some years ago with an Orthodox bishop who must remain anonymous,
I suggested a thought experiment. Suppose the Pope were to have a sudden epiphany
and decide to surrender to us Orthodox on all the doctrinal issues that divide
east and west, including the filioque and papal infallibility. What would be the
Moscow Patriarchate's response? It did not take long for us both to agree that
the Patriarchate would simply find some new excuse to keep the Vatican at arm's
length. As a human, political institution, the Patriarchate needs Rome more as
an enemy than as a friend.
That political reality is the real cause of the Moscow Patriarchate's neglect
of profound theological disagreements on matters such as the Holy Trinity and
its deliberate inflaming of petty irritants. For the last decade, Patriarch Aleksi
and his inner circle have denounced every Roman Catholic advance in Russia as
an act of "proselytism"-one of the most over-used words in current religious
writing-even if the filioquists are merely recovering what the Soviet regime stole
from them. The Patriarchate has constructed a historical myth according to which
Russia was always a purely Orthodox country, with Roman Catholics only among people
such as foreign diplomats in Moscow or St. Petersburg.
This myth ignores such stubborn realities as the unmistakably western-style
church buildings of cities like Irkutsk in the heart of Siberia - built by the
local Polish community in the 19th century. There were actually more such western
churches in pre-Soviet Russia, serving local minorities of Poles, Lithuanians
and Germans, than there are today after a full decade of alleged "spiritual
invasion." The great majority of "new" Roman congregations within
today's Russian Federation are restorations of parishes that existed in 1917.
The others are in towns such as Magadan that either did not exist or did not have
significant minorities of western Christians before the mass exiles of the Soviet
years. As one Moscow Catholic told me, "the real founder of Catholicism in
Siberia was Stalin."
The Vatican's decision earlier this year to create a normal administrative
structure in Russia, upgrading its four "apostolic administrations"
to full- fledged dioceses, brought a predictably sharp reaction from the Moscow
Patriarchate and its allies within the Russian government. In the most dramatic
of several episodes, Bishop Jerzy Mazur of the east-Siberian diocese was abruptly
expelled from the country; as of mid-July he still had not been allowed to return
from Warsaw. Overall, it is fair to say that relations between the Vatican and
the Russian Orthodox Church are now at their lowest point since the collapse of
the Soviet Union.
At the end of June the Moscow Patriarchate issued a long document making rather
specific charges about the Roman Catholics' "proselytism" in Russia.
In a sense these new accusations represent a kind of progress; at least the Patriarchate
now feels obliged to come up with concrete examples of alleged excesses rather
than sweepingly declaring that the very presence of Roman Catholics on Russian
soil is illegitimate. To what extent the charges are accurate remains to be seen.
If it is true, for example, that some Roman Catholic orders have been preaching
to captive audiences in the state school system, or running orphanages in Russia
which deliberately try to convert children previously raised as practicing Orthodox
Christians, then they are guilty of violating the Vatican's own statements about
inter-confessional relations.
What makes it difficult to judge such accusations is the Moscow Patriarchate's
absurdly broad use of the word "proselytism," under which it often includes
any western missionary efforts directed at anyone of ethnic Russian ancestry even
if that person has never set foot in an Orthodox church. The Patriarchate even
employs that term to denounce Protestant missionaries seeking to Christianize
Uzbek and Tatar Muslims-which is what the Russian Orthodox Church itself used
to do back in the 19th century when it had a genuine missionary vision. In effect
the Patriarchate's defense of so-called "traditional religions" has
now become a defense of only those religious organizations willing to collaborate
with the state. Placing politics over theology, the Patriarchate favors such religious
organizations not only over newcomers such as the Mormons but also over independent-minded
indigenous Christians such as the Old Believers or the unregistered "initsiativniki"
Baptists.
On the Roman Catholic side, the difficulty is that the Vatican has different
internal constituencies with different agendas. In Europe, including Russia itself,
most Roman Catholics agree with their man in Moscow, Archbishop Tadeusz Kondrusiewicz:
Russia is not to be regarded as a mission country, the lead in evangelizing its
people properly belongs to the Orthodox Church, and Rome should not try to win
converts from among those Russians who are already committed, practicing Orthodox
Christians. But many of the American supporters of Roman Catholic work in Russia
are as eager as their Protestant countrymen to win "the conversion of Russia."
The Moscow Patriarchate's crude over-reactions, such as its attempts to deny even
basic freedom to religious minorities, have made it easier in the short run for
Rome to satisfy both of these internal factions. In the long run, however, one
or the other is going to be disappointed.
This summer has seen an escalating war of words between the Patriarchate and
the Roman Catholics, conducted largely through the secular media. Again this represents
a kind of progress: The setting forth of specific complaints and demands, even
when highly polemical, at least provides material for analysis, discussion and
perhaps an eventual return to real dialogue. The western side of this debate accuses
the Russian Orthodox of a double standard-of trying to keep Roman Catholic dioceses
out of Russia even while the Moscow Patriarchate maintains bishops in places such
as Berlin and London. The accusation is largely valid, but the double standard
is not quite as blatant as one might think. The Moscow Patriarchate has made it
unmistakably clear that it regards its parishes in the west as enclaves to serve
Slavic ИmigrИs, not as missionary parishes working to recall western Europe to
its first-millennium Orthodox roots. (For example, it recently named not a westerner
but a Moscow ecclesiastical bureaucrat to be its newest bishop in the United Kingdom.)
From the standpoint of many western converts to Orthodoxy, the Patriarchate's
position is scandalous - in effect declaring that the Orthodox faith is the peculiar
property of the Russians, not a world religion.
Another benefit of the current debate is that it marks the end of a romantic
illusion-the naОve belief that reunion between the Orthodox Church and Rome was
just around the corner. In pursuit of this illusion the Vatican was too willing
to appease the Moscow Patriarchate, for example by failing to defend vigorously
the rights of its own faithful. One danger now is that Rome may swing to the opposite
extreme, cultivating good relations with Vladimir Putin at the expense of its
relations with Patriarch Aleksi. Putin has far more political skills than the
Patriarch and his circle, but he has no real interest in Roman Catholicism or
in Orthodoxy except as levers of political manipulation. Even when the Russian
state is presenting a more civilized face than the Russian Church, the Vatican
should remember that its most important dialogue in the long run is with the latter.
(END)
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