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- <text id=90TT2737>
- <link 93TG0092>
- <link 93HT0884>
- <link 89TT3258>
- <title>
- Oct. 15, 1990: No Longer Godless Communism
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 15, 1990 High Anxiety
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 70
- No Longer Godless Communism
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As the Soviet Union restores freedom of religion, believers face
- opportunities, scarcities and an upwelling of sectarian strife
- </p>
- <p> "We must engage in a most decisive battle against
- reactionary clergy and suppress their resistance with such
- cruelty that they will remember it for several decades to
- come."
- </p>
- <p>-- Lenin
- </p>
- <p> The founder of the Soviet state wrote those words in 1922,
- but they were only made public last April--at a time when
- Lenin's heirs were finally giving up their long antireligion
- battle. Perhaps the most startling evidence of the change was
- the celebration of the first Eucharist since 1918 in the
- Kremlin's Cathedral of the Assumption, barely three weeks ago.
- While Anatoli Lukyanov, the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet, and
- Ivan Silayev, prime minister of the Russian republic, and other
- Communist dignitaries looked on, Alexi II, Patriarch of All
- Russia, conducted services in the formerly pre-eminent church
- of Russia. The Patriarch then led the first Procession of the
- Cross in 70 years from the Kremlin through downtown Moscow to
- the Church of the Great Ascension, restored after decades of
- use as a workshop and potato warehouse.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the renewed religious freedom that Alexi had so
- publicly celebrated finally became official. Culminating a
- two-year thaw, the Soviet parliament passed a new Law on
- Freedom of Conscience by a vote of 341 to 2. The statute
- bestowed great opportunities on believers, estimated to number
- as many as 131 million, who have maintained their faith despite
- the oppression of Lenin and his successors. But with freedom
- come some grievous problems, principally shortages of money,
- trained clergy and just about everything else needed for
- religious restoration. At the same time, ugly sectarian
- conflicts, also long repressed, are boiling up within and among
- religious factions.
- </p>
- <p> The new law removes the most formidable barriers to church
- life, starting with the absence of property rights for
- religious groups. Previously, houses of worship existed at the
- whim of Communist bureaucrats, who confiscated tens of
- thousands of churches and mosques. Charitable and pastoral work
- beyond church walls was forbidden, while atheists had power to
- meddle in church affairs and propagandize against belief in God
- in schools and the media. Seminary training was severely
- restricted, and rank-and-file clergy were even cut off from
- formal food privileges. No faith could conduct religious
- education of children.
- </p>
- <p> All that is gone, but certain limitations remain. The
- parliament did not allow voluntary religious classes in
- state-run schools. Until a new legal regime for conscientious
- objectors is developed, they will still be drafted by the
- Soviet military. The law leaves intact a less powerful version
- of the Council for Religious Affairs, through which the KGB
- previously controlled religious organizations. But all of that
- may soon change further. The Russian republic, for one, plans
- an even more liberal religious statute of its own.
- </p>
- <p> Freedom may prove a mixed blessing for the predominant
- Russian Orthodox Church, which retained prerogatives under the
- old Soviet regime in return for passivity before a heavy-handed
- state. The Soviet government has returned more than 1,000
- churches, but money for needed repairs is sorely lacking.
- Though disenchanted atheists are flocking to the old faith,
- there are too few trained priests to greet them. Father
- Alexander Borisov, a Moscow city councilman, says many lay
- churchgoers "have never even read the Gospels." Little wonder:
- scarce Bibles still sell in Moscow churches for 200 rubles
- (roughly one month's pay).
- </p>
- <p> Religious glasnost has had the same effect within the
- Orthodox church as within Soviet society as a whole:
- conservative "stagnators" and "reformers" are struggling for
- church control. In addition, some conservatives in Orthodoxy
- are joining forces with unreconstructed Communists and
- right-wing nationalists. Their goal: revival of old-style
- Russian chauvinism, both religious and secular, within the
- boundaries of the Soviet multinational empire. Rumors are rife
- in Moscow that the right-wing movement inspired the murder a
- month ago of Father Alexander Menn, an outstanding church
- progressive assailed by anti-Semites for his Jewish descent.
- </p>
- <p> Russian Orthodoxy is also meeting competition from other
- creeds, particularly in the Ukraine, long the source of the
- majority of Orthodox priests and much of the church's income.
- A schismatic bishop has proclaimed the rebirth of the Ukrainian
- Autocephalous Orthodox Church, which spurns Moscow's
- centralized religious rule. Even more threatening is the sudden
- resurgence of Eastern Rite Catholicism in the western Ukraine.
- The millions of Catholic believers follow Orthodox liturgy but
- are loyal to the Pope. After World War II, the Eastern Rite
- church was abolished at a Stalinist-controlled synod, followed
- by a bloody repression in which church property was given to
- the Russian Orthodox. Somehow Catholicism survived.
- </p>
- <p> After Mikhail Gorbachev met with Pope John Paul II in Rome
- last December, he gave tacit recognition to Ukrainian
- Catholics. They have since formed at least 1,600 parishes, many
- of them using formerly Catholic buildings seized from Orthodox
- congregations. Talks between the Catholics and the Moscow
- patriarchate over the property disputes have broken down twice
- this year.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet Union's small Protestant minority is not
- squabbling; it is growing. Stadiums in Moscow and Leningrad
- have been filled for revival meetings, and later this month 850
- activists from around the country will meet to plan
- evangelistic strategy. Soviet Muslims are likewise heartened.
- "A revival of Islam is taking place," says Hajji Rais, the
- muezzin of Moscow. He notes, however, that his mosque is alone
- in serving 600,000 believers in the area.
- </p>
- <p> There is also a thaw for Soviet Jews, who have long suffered
- a double burden of religious suppression and persecution as
- suspected "agents of Zionism." They are now able to take Hebrew
- lessons. The state has given back a number of synagogues, but
- few Soviet Jews remain regular worshipers. Numbers will dwindle
- further because of emigration, which reached an all-time high
- last month. Moscow's Chief Rabbi, Adolf Shayevich, says Jews
- no longer leave because of religious restrictions but because
- of economic decline and fear of anti-Semitism.
- </p>
- <p> Religious ferment is bound to continue, along with the other
- changes reshaping the U.S.S.R. But it is uncertain whether the
- emerging society will be, in the phrase of 19th century writer
- Nikolai Leskov, "baptized but not enlightened"--formally
- religious but narrowly sectarian in outlook. The odds on
- enlightenment have been lengthened greatly, however, by the
- ability of the country's deeply spiritual people to embrace and
- expand their beliefs in public.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling. Reported by Yuri Zarakhovich/Moscow, with
- other bureaus.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-