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- <text id=89TT3160>
- <link 90TT2737>
- <title>
- Dec. 04, 1989: Cross Meets Kremlin
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 04, 1989 Women Face The '90s
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 74
- Cross Meets Kremlin
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Gorbachev's historic visit to Pope John Paul II seals a truce
- after 72 years of bitter spiritual warfare
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling
- </p>
- <p> Of all the events that have shaken the Soviet bloc in 1989,
- none is more fraught with history -- or more implausible --
- than the polite encounter that will take place this week in
- Vatican City. There, in the spacious ceremonial library of the
- 16th century Apostolic Palace, the czar of world atheism,
- Mikhail Gorbachev, will visit the Vicar of Christ, Pope John
- Paul II. Before delivering formal speeches in the presence of
- their entourages, the two East Europeans will sit down alone to
- chat in Russian without interpreters.
- </p>
- <p> The moment will be electric, and not only because John Paul
- helped inflame the fervor for freedom in his Polish homeland
- that has swept like brush fire across Eastern Europe. Beyond
- that, the meeting of the two men symbolizes the end of the 20th
- century's most dramatic spiritual war, a conflict in which the
- seemingly irresistible force of Communism battered against the
- immovable object of Christianity.
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, the battalions of Marxism seemed to have
- the upper hand over the soldiers of the Cross. In the wake of
- the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Lenin had pledged toleration
- but delivered terror. "Russia turned crimson with the blood of
- martyrs," says Father Gleb Yakunin, Russian Orthodoxy's bravest
- agitator for religious freedom. In the Bolsheviks' first five
- years in power, 28 bishops and 1,200 priests were cut down by
- the red sickle. Stalin greatly accelerated the terror, and by
- the end of Khrushchev's rule, liquidations of clergy reached an
- estimated 50,000. After World War II, fierce but generally less
- bloody persecution spread into the Ukraine and the new Soviet
- bloc, affecting millions of Roman Catholics and Protestants as
- well as Orthodox.
- </p>
- <p> The violence did not cease with Stalin's death in 1953. In
- 1981 Pope John Paul barely escaped assassination. It is believed
- in the highest circles of the Vatican that Gorbachev's Kremlin
- predecessors were the masterminds, though the Soviets deny
- this. The reason for the attack, claims a ranking official of
- the Holy See, was that the Polish Pope refused to accept the
- division of Europe into East and West. "The East bloc," says
- this official, "realized he was a destabilizing factor."
- </p>
- <p> That he was. While Gorbachev's hands-off policy was the
- immediate cause of the chain reaction of liberation that has
- swept through Eastern Europe in the past few months, John Paul
- deserves much of the longer-range credit. His triumphant tour
- of Poland in 1979, says a Polish bishop, altered the "mentality
- of fear, the fear of police and tanks, of losing your job, of
- not getting promoted, of being thrown out of school, of failing
- to get a passport. People learned that if they ceased to fear
- the system, the system was helpless." Thus was born Solidarity,
- backed by the church and led by such friends of the Pope as Lech
- Walesa and Tadeusz Mazowiecki, who subsequently became the
- Soviet bloc's first Christian Prime Minister.
- </p>
- <p> But the Pope's vision stretched far beyond Poland. Just
- before he ascended the throne of Peter in 1978, Karol Wojtyla
- had confided to some German bishops an astonishing prediction
- of European Communism's inevitable demise. As an ideology, said
- the onetime philosophy professor, Communism had nothing more to
- say and stood for nothing except the perpetuation of power. As
- an economic system, it had failed utterly. During the Pope's
- 1979 visit to Orthodoxy's Ecumenical Patriarch in Turkey, a
- papal adviser told TIME's Wilton Wynn that John Paul urgently
- hoped to bring Rome and the Eastern Orthodox Church together.
- Reason: the Pope was convinced that Communism faced inevitable
- collapse and that Soviet bloc nations would turn to Christianity
- to fill the void.
- </p>
- <p> Though talk of Communism's collapse seemed like wishful
- thinking at that time, John Paul based his uncanny prediction
- on a keen sense of moral and historical dynamics, and also on
- personal experience. Unlike other leaders in the West, he knew
- what it was like to live under a Marxist regime day by day.
- Through the 1980s his speeches hammered home the concept of a
- Europe reunited from the Atlantic to the Urals and inspired by
- Christian faith. John Paul marked 1988's millennium of Ukrainian
- and Russian Christendom by evoking Europeans' "desire that
- barriers should be broken down."
- </p>
- <p> If those barriers have really begun to topple, it is
- largely owing to the political reforms Gorbachev has inspired
- throughout the East bloc. In the process, the Soviet leader has
- let Christians start rebuilding their devastated institutions.
- Gorbachev is not motivated by religious belief, though he was
- baptized into Orthodoxy by his grandparents, and his mother
- remains a faithful churchgoer. His aims are temporal and
- pragmatic: he hopes to harness the force of Christianity in the
- fight against his country's moral decay, seen in growing drug
- abuse, alcoholism, suicide, sloth and a 50% divorce rate. Says
- Russian Orthodoxy's Metropolitan Pitirim: "Everyone has realized
- that failures in the economy and politics are a result of
- ethical violations. We want a renewed sense of spiritual
- values."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev has also grasped the fact that political and
- economic survival depends upon the goodwill of the Soviet
- people, among whom Christians have always far outnumbered
- Communists. Gorbachev, moreover, needs the cooperation of the
- West, observes Father Mark, a reform-minded Orthodox priest in
- Moscow, who considers Gorbachev's program within the U.S.S.R.
- "a result of foreign policy necessity." More than any of the 18
- summit meetings between Soviet leaders and U.S. Presidents,
- Gorbachev's pilgrimage to the papal library will make his nation
- a respectable participant in world discourse.
- </p>
- <p> The road to this week's Vatican meeting was paved by 212
- decades of subtle diplomatic maneuvers. Beginning with John
- XXIII's papacy and the Second Vatican Council, the Vatican's
- master diplomat, Agostino Casaroli, pursued church Ostpolitik
- that sought openings in Eastern Europe in return for a more
- conciliatory stance toward Communism. But neither that strategy
- nor John Paul II's more hard-nosed approach achieved much before
- Gorbachev took power.
- </p>
- <p> The big breakthrough came when the Pope boldly dispatched
- Casaroli, by now Vatican Secretary of State, and seven other
- Cardinals to Moscow last year to celebrate the Christian
- millennium. Casaroli managed a 90-minute meeting with Gorbachev
- and handed him a three-page letter plus a memo from John Paul
- listing complaints about treatment of Catholics. Gorbachev
- responded directly to several of the Pope's requests. Last year
- Lithuania's two leading bishops were returned to head dioceses
- after a combined 53 years of internal exile, and the cathedral
- in Vilnius, previously used as an art museum, was restored for
- worship. This year the Belorussian republic got its first bishop
- in 63 years. That paved the way for Archbishop Angelo Sodano,
- who oversees the Vatican's foreign relations, to make the
- arrangements for Gorbachev's historic visit to the Holy See.
- </p>
- <p> These concessions to Catholicism are only part of
- Gorbachev's religious liberalization. Television is broadcasting
- worship services, and religious art is openly displayed. Last
- month the Orthodox Eucharist was celebrated in the 15th century
- Assumption Cathedral, inside the Kremlin, for the first time
- since 1918.
- </p>
- <p> Most important, 3,000 new churches have opened in the past
- nine months. However, Russian Orthodoxy's current 10,000
- churches are a far cry from the 18,000 that existed when Stalin
- died, and just a fraction of the 54,000 before the Bolshevik
- Revolution. Ever since World War II, when Stalin fostered a
- revival of Orthodoxy in order to enlist its support in the war
- effort, the Kremlin's policy has been not to liquidate the
- church but to infiltrate and control it. For that reason, the
- Soviet regime has always preferred docile Russian-led Orthodox
- and Protestant churches to Catholicism, which is more
- independent and led by a feisty Pope in Rome.
- </p>
- <p> But the battle for religious freedom is not yet won. The
- Supreme Soviet has still not taken up a long-anticipated
- revision of the repressive religious statute instituted by
- Stalin in 1929. There is no certainty whether, or when,
- parliament will scrap the hated law, which subjects all church
- activities to Communist control and forbids parish education.
- Nor, given the history of the U.S.S.R., is there certainty that
- rights proclaimed in speeches and laws will be honored by
- bureaucrats.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the gains made by the Soviet Union's 70 million
- Christians have also been enjoyed by the estimated 74 million
- Christians who live in the six satellite nations. Poland's
- Communists "have realized that unleashing conflict with the
- church has been a mistake throughout the past 45 years," says
- Alojzy Orszulik, the Polish bishops' spokesman. The nation,
- which remains 95% Catholic, this year became the first in the
- Soviet bloc to enact a law restoring all basic rights to the
- churches. Diplomatic relations with the Holy See were
- established in July. Hungary, also rapidly liberalizing, is 60%
- Catholic and has sizable Lutheran and Reformed churches. The
- regime is rewriting the religious-control laws, has abolished
- the repressive state Office for Church Affairs and, after talks
- last week at the Vatican, has indicated that diplomatic
- relations will be re-established. The Pope is due to visit
- Hungary in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> The surging crowds that toppled Czechoslovakia's rulers
- last week were inspired by, among others, Frantisek Cardinal
- Tomasek, 90, who has become an increasingly militant proponent
- of change. The ousted Jakes regime, which had permitted the
- appointment of six new Catholic bishops, only two weeks ago
- concluded a round of talks at the Vatican. In East Germany, the
- bloc's only predominantly Protestant state, this year's
- pro-democracy movement emerged from small church gatherings
- that, through the 1980s, criticized the Communists' handling of
- foreign policy, disarmament and the environment. A bishops'
- statement read from every pulpit Sept. 10 detailed "long
- overdue" changes. Most of the mass rallies and marches since
- then have gathered at Protestant churches.
- </p>
- <p> As in the U.S.S.R., the dominant Orthodox Church has been
- subservient to the regimes in both Bulgaria and Rumania,
- remaining mute when the leaderships closed churches and
- repressed clergy. Rumania's huge Eastern Rite Catholic community
- has forcibly lived underground since 1948.
- </p>
- <p> The most contentious religious problem within the Soviet
- Union concerns the 4 million or so Catholics in the western
- Ukraine, whose plight is a key agenda item in this week's talks
- between Gorbachev and the Pope. Friendlier contacts, and a papal
- visit to the U.S.S.R., cannot occur unless this, the world's
- largest underground religious community, is restored. Under
- Stalin, all Ukrainian Catholic bishops were imprisoned and a
- fraudulent 1946 synod dissolved their jurisdictions, handing
- over 4,100 churches to Russian Orthodoxy. The majority of the
- Catholic priests rejected the takeover and either were arrested
- or went into hiding.
- </p>
- <p> Decades later, ten bishops and an unknown number of priests
- are still functioning. "They deny us the right to praise our
- God openly," says Catholicism's Metropolitan Vladimir, 83, who
- faithfully celebrates clandestine Masses daily on a makeshift
- altar in his tiny Lvov apartment. Last September more than
- 100,000 demonstrators wound their way through Lvov to the St.
- Yuri Cathedral, one of the former Catholic churches currently
- operated by the Orthodox. Subsequently, Ukrainians in Lvov and
- elsewhere have retaken control of some Orthodox church
- buildings.
- </p>
- <p> Rebirth of the Ukrainian churches may stir the sort of
- nationalist fervor that is inextricably linked with religion.
- Along with economic failure, this unrest poses the gravest of
- threats to Gorbachev's regime. Yet Gorbachev apparently
- calculates that the movement will be safer aboveground and in
- contact with a Pope who preaches against political violence. The
- major reason that Gorbachev has not done more for the Ukrainian
- Catholics has been pressure from the Russian Orthodoxy, which
- stands to lose half its flock in some regions.
- </p>
- <p> Once the Ukrainian problem is resolved, assuming the
- Gorbachev-inspired liberalization continues, the Roman Pontiff
- can pursue his overarching vision of reunion with the whole of
- Eastern Orthodoxy. The churches of the East and West are like
- "two lungs of a single body," John Paul is fond of saying.
- Religious negotiations have made surprisingly brisk progress on
- the ecclesiastical and theological bases for union.
- </p>
- <p> Until very recently, the Russian Orthodox Church would
- probably have vetoed reunification under pressure from the
- Kremlin. Now, with the Communists less inclined to interfere,
- the idea of unity seems more feasible. The main Orthodox fear,
- observes one Vatican official, is that "we are too powerful and
- centralized." But in the end, he speculates, the authority of
- the papacy will not be an "insurmountable problem." According
- to this analysis, "the church could revert to the 1st millennium
- model, a communion of churches with greater autonomy," instead
- of the centralized church structure of the past 1,000 years.
- That is an astonishing scenario coming from a high-ranking
- official of the Holy See.
- </p>
- <p> The second aspect of the Pope's vision, a revival of
- Christianity as Marxism recedes, is as problematic as the goal
- of church reunion. But John Paul is not the only person to
- foresee such a momentous development. Alexander Ogorodnikov, the
- Orthodox dissident whose Christian Democratic Union was the
- first non-Communist political party to request official
- recognition, predicts a "second Christianization" of Russia.
- </p>
- <p> Father Franc Rode of the Vatican's Council for Dialogue
- with Non-Believers says Westerners can barely comprehend the
- "horrible spiritual desert" that resulted when the Bolsheviks
- turned atheism into a political ideology, attempting to expunge
- God from the human soul. "This entire experiment," he asserts,
- "is now proving to have been a dismal failure, one of the most
- horrible in man's history." If that experiment is in fact
- nearing its end, then much of the credit can be claimed by two
- improbable allies: Mikhail Gorbachev and John Paul II.
- </p>
- <p>--Ann Blackman/Moscow, Cathy Booth/Rome and Angela
- Leuker/Vienna
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-