Like Islamic extremists, Russian President Vladimir Putin wraps himself in the garb of religious orthodoxy in order to present himself as an authentic exponent of traditional values. Yet one need only consider the lives of genuine spiritual fundamentalists to see this ruse for what it really is.
The standard interpretation of the Russia-Ukraine war is that it is a “clash of cultures” pitting Western liberalism against traditional Russian authoritarianism. But this is deeply misleading. Far from being a traditionalist, Vladimir Putin is merely the latest in a series of murderous modernizers stretching from Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great to Catherine the Great and Stalin.
When Stalin was asked to define Bolshevism in the late 1920s, he described it as a combination of Russian dedication to a Cause and American pragmatism. Once in power, he sought to imitate the American industrialist Henry Ford’s achievements throughout the Soviet Union, brutally erasing all traces of Russian tradition through, most prominently, the violent collectivization of agriculture.
Stalin was also a great admirer of Peter the Great, who built a new capital for Russia on the Baltic Sea (St. Petersburg) to establish a direct link with Western Europe. Peter’s reforms faced resistance from so-called Old Believers, Eastern Orthodox Christians whose liturgical and ritual practices predated the reforms carried out by Patriarch Nikon of Moscow in 1652-66. Many Old Believers ultimately chose death over compromising their faith. Between the seventeenth and nineteenth century, thousands died by self-immolation.
Things only really changed in Russia with the October Revolution; and even then, the first Soviet government included several prominent figures with Old Believer backgrounds. The Bolsheviks correctly saw such sectarians as representatives of a long-running social protest against the czarist regime. The Old Believers had always distrusted the unity of church and state (which really meant the former’s subordination to the latter), insisting that the religious community remain a self-organization of common people.
Not surprisingly, state persecution of religious believers intensified under Stalin, and the Orthodox Church’s subordination to the state continues to this day. Putin, indeed, has mobilized the Church for his own political ends.
According to Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, Russians need not fear nuclear war, because Christians should welcome the end of the world. “We await the Lord Jesus Christ who will come in great glory, destroy Evil, and judge all nations,” he said late last year. Thus, what appears as a reactionary move – a return to the old orthodoxy – may in fact be a perverted expression of the rejection of the domination and exploitation that passes under the guise of “modernization” in the temporal world.
A very different, but illustrative, example of such resistance is Canudos, the nineteenth-century outlaw community deep in the Brazilian backlands of Bahia, which became a home to prostitutes, beggars, bandits, outcasts, and the poor under the leadership of the apocalyptic prophet Antônio Conselheiro. According to Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy of the Workers’ Party of Brazil:“This community developed a ‘mutual, cooperative and solidary concept of work’ … a kind of socio-mystical, religious, assisting, community power inspired by the ‘equalitarian fraternity of the primitive Christian communism,’ in which there was no hunger. ‘They all worked together. Nobody had anything. Everybody worked the soil, everybody labored. Harvested… Here’s yours… Here’s yours. Nobody got more nor less.’ Conselheiro had read Thomas More, and his experiences were similar to those of utopian socialists Charles Fourier and Robert Owen. Canudos was razed by the Brazilian army, and Conselheiro was beheaded in 1897.” (He had already died of illness.)This refuge from money, property, taxes, and marriage did not disintegrate because of its internal tensions; it was destroyed by the armed forces of Brazil’s “progressive” and secular government. Canudos was a place where the victims of historical progress had acquired a space of their own. Utopia actually existed for a brief moment, and that was too much for the modernizers. How else can one account for the slaughter of all inhabitants of Canudos, including women and children? The very memory of freedom had to be erased.
The obvious counterargument to the defense of Canudos is that religious fundamentalist projects like the Islamic State are no different. But a clear line separates the two. While Canudos openly welcomed the Other, the Islamic State – like all religious fundamentalists – does not.
If today’s “fundamentalists” sincerely believe that they have found their way to Truth, why do they feel so threatened by non-believers? After all, when a Buddhist encounters Western hedonists, he does not get worked up or feel the need to condemn them; he just shakes his head at their self-defeating search for happiness.
But pseudo-fundamentalists are obsessed with non-believers’ sinful lives because the sins reflect their own temptations. Unlike the truly faithful, they envy, rather than pity, those who satisfy their appetites.
Whereas Tibetan monks regard Tibet as “the center of the world, the heart of civilization,” European civilization is decidedly ex-centered. Our central longing is to recover some ultimate pillar of Wisdom, secret agalma, or spiritual treasure that we lost long ago. Colonization was never only about imposing Western values on others; it was also a quest for lost spiritual purity. This story is as old as Western civilization itself: For the ancient Greeks, Egypt was the mythical storehouse of ancient wisdom.
In our own societies, the difference between authentic fundamentalists and perverted fundamentalists is that the first (like the American Amish) get along with their neighbors, because they are concerned with their own world, not with what others are doing. Perverted fundamentalists, by contrast, are haunted by ambivalence, motivated by a simultaneous horror and envy of sinners – an unholy brew that pushes them toward acts of violence, be it terrorist bombings or brutal invasions.
Putin’s regime has nothing in common with an authentic Russian spirituality that rejects European modernization. His fantasized “Eurasia” is merely a term to legitimize his own misbegotten modernization project. That is why we must not dismiss Russia as a deeply conservative and traditionalist country that is forever lost to modernity. After all, the Russian spirituality embodied by the Old Believers rejects authoritarian state power. To defeat the perverts now ruling in the Kremlin, it will have to be reawakened.
19 comments:
The uprising in Canudos is also the subject of possibly my favourite book, La Guerra del fin del Mundo by Mario Vargas LLosa. I literally wept when the Counsillor died. And when I finished the book, I ran to the shop to buy all of Llosa's books!
I warmly recommend The War of the End of the World, as it is called in English...
The uprising in Canudos is also the subject of possibly my favourite book, La Guerra del fin del Mundo by Mario Vargas LLosa. I literally wept when the Counsillor died. And when I finished the book, I ran to the shop to buy all of Llosa's books!
I warmly recommend The War of the End of the World, as it is called in English...
//Like Islamic extremists, Russian President Vladimir Putin wraps himself in the garb of religious orthodoxy
Yawn.
BS.
From people who dunno that...
current "religious orthodoxy", was (re)created by Stalin.
And was pawns of KGB all ways down.
So, equating it with Islam -- is utter BS.
//Putin is merely the latest in a series of murderous modernizers stretching from Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great to Catherine the Great and Stalin.
Modernizer???
And what he did "modernize" ???
Little dumbass conviniently forgot that liliPut came to power AFTER RFia was successfully modernised. By western standards. And what he doing now --- completely in vanes of how West works. Not East.
Yawn.
He mimicing Western Menace Hitler.
NOT mullas.
And that is only willfull blindness, makes Westerners unable to admit it.
I've heard of Llosa, but can't remember the context... I'll have to do some research before I commit to reading him.
I should probably read it in Spanish... I need to brush up. It's been too long.
I thought that Putin was all buddy-buddy with the Russian Orthodox now. That's wrong? Why are the Ukrainians kicking around the ROC in Ukraine then?
Besides, as Rene Girard said, "Religion is the mother of culture". If Russia has any culture, the ROC is at its' fount.
btw - My sister in Kodiak just finished restoring a ROC icon. It took her 2 years...
Modernizer... like the '68 hippies with Capitalism, now known as "Cultural Capitalism" or Khomeini did in Iran to Shi'a Islam with his Veleyaat al Fiqh (Guardianship of the Jurists) heresy.
Sure, if you deny that Putin has helped introduced modified religious "doctrines" into the Russian orthodox Church to get Russian women to have more kids and sign them up for the Army, then I suppose he's no "modernizer"....
@@
MVL is definitely not a revolutionary, he stood as a conservative in some Pres election, in Peru IIRW.
La Ciudad y los Peros is also brilliant.
//Sure, if you deny
You mentioning "modernization" and "orthodoxy" in one sentence and as equal in meaning.
Just a remark. Yawn.
The orthodox have no modernizers? Where do new sects come from, then? Luther didn't "modernize" the Catholics? Calvin? Adam Smith didn't modernize the Calvinists?
Do you know what "evolution" means?
How orthodoxy becomes heterodoxy?
Did you watch the Dostoevsky "Demons" video... how ideologies are like demons that "possess" people, fly into pigs, and make them drown themselves in the sea?
Ah, against Fujimori... now I remember. And Llosa went from Far Left to Far Right... so he's definitely gotten around.
I.
Already commented on it -- it all happens -- because people themself want it.
Yawn.
En mass, of course.
Mere individual. Especially one who will appear just before carriage of that Jaggernaut -- of silent preferences of masses.
Can be against it till they heart contents(and far beyond)
But their opinion -- does not matter.
Because -- Inertia.
Because -- Reality.
Because...
cest... la vi.
//Do you know what "evolution" means?
Well enough for my purposes.
And what important -- struggle to know MORE... not less. Not drown in self-deception and ignorance.
Yawn.
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