Putin's Puritan Piety: The Ideological War Against The West
By Giulio Meotti/Gatestone Institute October 12, 2016
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The first Cold War was a clash between Western democracy and the
Soviet dictatorship of the proletariat. The new Cold War is a one
between Western liberalism and Russian conservatism.
During
the Cold War, American conservatives used to label the Soviet Union
"the godless nation" on the verge of collapse because it had purged
religion from the Russian society.
Two decades
later, the Kremlin is occupied by a former officer of the KGB, secretly
baptized, who launches the same accusation of atheism at the United
States and the West.
Welcome to "Putin's covert war on Western decadence", as The Spectator defined it:
"Putin's
Russia is fast becoming a very puritan place. Ever since returning to
the presidency in 2012, Putin has pursued an increasingly
religious-conservative ideology both at home and abroad, defining Russia
as a moral fortress against sexual licence and decadence, porn and gay
rights".
Recently, Russian officials censored
porn websites. When the largest pornography site on the internet,
PornHub, offered the Russia's official communications and media watchdog
a premium account in exchange for lifting the ban, Russian officials
replied: "Sorry, we are not in the market and the demography is not a
commodity."
Russian President Vladimir Putin's
ideological war against the West is getting cocky and self-confident. In
a televised speech from a Kremlin hall, Putin declared that Russian
traditional family values are a bulwark against the West's "so-called
tolerance -- genderless and infertile."
"Many
Euro-Atlantic countries have abandoned their roots, including Christian
values," said Putin. The patriarch of the Orthodox Church, Kirill,
echoed Putin by charging the West of being engaged in a "spiritual
disarmament" of the Russian people, and by criticizing the European laws
that prevent wearing religious symbols in public. "We have experienced
an era of atheism and we know what it means to live without God", Kirill
said.
The first ten years of Putin's dominance
were devoid of any religious and cultural reference. Putin and his
circle never mentioned any "values", and did not try to teach any moral
lessons to the West. The second Putin decade has been marked by a
"conservative revolution" based on the revival of an isolated Russian
Orthodox culture, separated for centuries from European civilization.
"Putin
wants to make Russia into the traditional values capital of the world,"
said Masha Gessen, author of a Putin biography, entitled The Man
Without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin. In the Russian
media, Putin is now called "the savior of the decadent West."
Putin
is now focused on a church in the heart of Paris. The Sainte-Trinité
Cathedral, often referred to as "Moscow on the Seine," is under
construction near the Eiffel Tower, in the Quai Branly, and will be the
largest Orthodox cathedral in France.
"This
church is an outpost of the other Europe, conservative and anti-modern,
in the heart of the country of libertinism and secularism", said Michel
Eltchaninoff, a French scholar and author of the book, Dans la tête de
Vladimir Poutine ("Inside the Head of Vladimir Putin"), on the thoughts
of the Russian president.
Are France, the
United States and Ireland open to gay marriage? Putin's Russia bans "gay
propaganda". Does Western Europe allow quick divorce? Putin's Russia
taxes divorce. Does the West legalize abortion on demand? Putin's Russia
is trying to restrict it. Russia's leading clerics have just urged
Putin to ban abortion. A new Russian law also targets "foreign
religions."
"Western values, from liberalism to
the recognition of the rights of sexual minorities, from Protestantism
to comfortable prisons for murderers, arouse in us suspicion, wonder and
alienation", said Yevgeny Bazhanov, one of Putin's "intellectuals".
Putin
has apparently even managed to win the support of the most renowned
Russian musicians, such as the conductor Valery Gergiev, superintendent
at the St. Petersburg Marjinskij theater.
Even
in foreign policy, Putin often justifies its decisions with references
to Christianity. The New York Times explained that, in addition to
strategic and economic interests, a major reason to explain Russian
support for Assad's regime in Syria is the uncompromising position of
the Orthodox Church.
The Russian Patriarch
Kirill evoked, in fact, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, with its
endless "carcasses of defiled churches."
Before
that, there was the historical role of Russia in defense of Armenian
Christians against Turkish pro-Western Muslims, and Christian Serbs
against Bosnian Muslims supported by the U.S. To try to justify the
invasion of the Crimea, Putin said that is "our Temple Mount," a
reference to Judaism's holiest site in Jerusalem.
Vladimir
Putin has presided for years over the great revival of Orthodox
Christianity. On the eve of the Bolshevik Revolution, the Russian church
had 50,000 parishes and 60 schools. By 1941, Stalin had eliminated the
church as a public institution. Every monastery and seminary had been
closed.
With the fall of communism in 1991, the church began to
rebuild its devastated institutional life. Putin's Russia is returning
to the concept of Byzantine symphonia -- an approach in which church and
state work together.
The church apparently
aspires to achieve the "re-Christianization of the Russian nation."
Although as much as 70% of Russians call themselves Orthodox and are
baptized, only 4% take part in the liturgy. But Russia is also one of
the few countries in the Western world in which religion is becoming
increasingly important and not less.
To
establish his authority over the Russian society, Putin has shaped a
doctrine mobilizing the entire Russian society against a perceived
Western "decadence." The Kremlin has closely followed the opposition to
gay marriage in France and tensions over migrants in the European
Union.
Putin then launched a conservative
offensive aimed at both Russians and Europeans. As the Wall Street
Journal wrote, "Putin Depicts Russia as a Bulwark Against European
Decadence."
Against a perceived Western amnesia
about its own Christian past, moral relativism and political
correctness, Putin affirmed the Christian roots of Russia, traditional
family values, patriotism and obedience to hierarchy.
"According
to him, in essence, Europe has entered a phase of decadence, while
Russia is in an ascending phase of its history", Michel Eltchaninoff
says of Putin.
"He relies on the
pseudo-scientific model of Konstantin Leontiev, one of whose most famous
concepts Vladimir Putin is fond of quoting: that of 'flourishing
complexity'. According to the Russian philosopher, who took a fervently
anti-European and anti-bourgeois position, any civilization, after a
period of original simplicity, reaches its apex in an era of flourishing
complexity, before declining into a period of simplification and
confusion.
For Leontiev, ever since the
Renaissance, Europe has ceased to give birth to saints and geniuses, and
only engenders engineers, parliamentarians and ethics professors. It
makes everything uniform, through its mode of development and its
conformism.
But it is also confused. Its
inhabitants are lost, and no longer know how to give meaning to their
lives. They show themselves to be incapable of perceiving an inspiring
superior principle."
The first Cold War was a
clash between Western democracy and the Soviet dictatorship of the
proletariat. Western freedom crushed the Soviet gulags. The new Cold War
is a one between Western liberalism and Russian conservatism.
As
happened during the first Cold War, when the Soviets depicted
capitalism as a Western fault, avaricious and amoral, the burden is
presumably again on the West to prove it has better way of life and that
its society is not just a "decadent" stereotype.
Meanwhile,
against the West's visible lack of self-confidence and the
deterioration of Europe's élite, Putin's geopolitical and ideological
hegemony is getting stronger.
Originally published at Gatestone Institute - reposted with permission.
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