Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
and Lev Regelson gained a splash of
their own with a report to the World
Christian Council on the persecution
of believers.
In
response,
the
Soviet
authorities unleashed the heavy
weapons
of
their
propaganda
arsenal.
Izvestia
, one of their two
largest newspapers, went on the
attack. In January 1976, Vladimir
Kuroyedov, the government’s most
senior religious official, took over
almost a whole page to detail how in
fact Soviet religious laws were the
most ‘humane and democratic in the
world’, and that anyone saying
otherwise was lying to harm the
country’s international prestige.
There were, he continued with
sadness, a few malcontents, but
religious believers themselves could
be trusted to drive them out.
Although, in fact, a hundred of
Father Dmitry’s parishioners – at
considerable risk to themselves –
had signed a petition protesting
against his sacking, Kuroyedov
insisted they had expelled him
because of his ‘sermons of an anti-
social content’.
‘For this same reason his
parishioners have thrown him out of
two other churches,’ Kuroyedov
added. That was a lie. Father Dmitry
lost his first position because the
church was dynamited and his
second because he was sacked by the
bishop – neither of them things
Kuroyedov could admit without
fatally
undermining
his
own
argument that believers were free
and unhindered. Instead he linked
Father Dmitry to the state’s enemies.
‘This
“shepherd”,
previously
convicted of a crime, has been
declared by reactionary propaganda
in the West to be a “genuine fighter
for the faith, suffering for Christ”,’
Kuroyedov’s article concluded with
heavy
Russian
irony,
naturally
without mentioning the nature of
Father Dmitry’s criminal offence –
writing a poem – or his subsequent
rehabilitation.
It was a warning to his
parishioners and friends to shun
him, to leave him alone, but they did
not heed it. Father Dmitry had taught
them to trust each other, and that
meant defending each other too.
‘To tear a priest away from his
flock is like a doctor leaving his
patients, or a teacher his pupils. But
these comparisons are weak. It
would be nearer the truth to say it is
like tearing a mother away from her
children,’ said Igor Shafarevich, a
mathematician
and
prominent
dissident, in a statement on Father
Dmitry’s dismissal.
‘Father Dmitry’s living, free,
Christian word went into the hearts
of listeners and fanned their faith; it
also gripped those who were
seeking,
those
who
doubted,
unbelievers. Father Dmitry attracted
young people – this was his main
crime,’ said an appeal by Father
Dmitry’s
friends
Yakunin
and
Regelson to the B B C.
Not everyone agreed with them,
of
course.
Father
Dmitry’s
notebooks include a conversation
with a fellow priest who told him he
liked the sermon, but would have
taken out ‘the sharpness’.
‘And if a sword isn’t sharp, if a
sabre isn’t sharp, how do you fight?
With a blunt blade? The sharpness is
the point,’ replied Father Dmitry.
The priest was not so sure: ‘If we
are tough, they will shut the
churches. As it is we are preserving
something.’
But Father Dmitry was an old
campaigner, and refused to change.
He said the fight to save his nation
was urgent, and could not be put off
for tactical reasons.
‘In the camps we used to say
“You should eat today what you
could eat tomorrow.” And I am
doing today what I could do
tomorrow, since otherwise tomorrow
might not come,’ he said. ‘How
many people were shot, how many
were killed in the camps, how many
died at the front with a meaningless
scream? They died, and for what? So
their children could suffer?’
I met Father Vladimir Sedov
between the platforms of a metro
station in western Moscow. Cheerful
and lean in his black robes, he
looked like a wolf with a sense of
humour. His flat was chaotic, full of
books and icons and bunk beds and
living things. His cats regularly
interrupted our conversation. One
was bald and as friendly as a dog,
one more cautious, despite its
spangly collar. There was also a
parrot, and several sons.
Father Vladimir is straight-
backed and dignified with the
bearing of a man in early middle
age, but he shared his memories of
Father Dmitry with the eagerness of
a schoolboy rushing for lunch. He
was born in Baku, but grew up in
the Moscow region where his father
was an engineer. He studied in the
mathematics
department
of
his
university, and a distinguished career
beckoned when this happened:
‘There were these rumours about an
unusual priest who held question-
and-answer sessions. My friends had
been, and I heard about him, and I
wanted to go too.’
This was in 1976, just a few
months after
Izvestia
’s assault on
Father Dmitry and his dismissal
from the church in Kabanovo. It is
clear from Father Dmitry’s sacking,
and from the criticism of him in the
national press, that the authorities
considered him a significant threat
by this stage. Nonetheless, in April
1976, he got a new parish. Perhaps
the Church authorities calculated that
he would, after having been sacked
twice, not behave so unorthodoxly
another
time.
Perhaps
some
individuals in the Church hierarchy
secretly admired his stance. They
were all believers after all, and a few
bishops may deep down have been
proud that one of their fellows was
doing his job as they were all
supposed to. Perhaps top officials
were sensitive to foreign opinion,
and did not want to give Westerners
an opening to criticize the Soviet
Union by depriving Father Dmitry
of a post, no matter how irritating he
was for the old men in the Kremlin.
Besides, the security organs were
no doubt hoping that, after the very
public warning of the
Izvestia
article,
ordinary churchgoers would shun
Father Dmitry’s services. It was well
known
that
association
with
dissidents could lead to a summons,
to questioning, to unemployment
and, potentially, to prison. And
prison was a place to be dreaded.
Dissidents like Anatoly Marchenko
had written prison diaries and
circulated them in typewritten and
carbon-copied
manuscripts,
so
everyone knew that the Soviet jails
were brutal, diseased and cruel. At
one point, Marchenko, who was
jailed for illegally attempting to leave
the country, described seeing a
fellow inmate chop off his penis and
throw it out the window at a female
guard. The other prisoners barely
flinched, so accustomed were they to
human degradation.
But,
in
many
ways
the
authorities’
approach
proved
counterproductive.
The
young
people coming to Father Dmitry’s
church knew the risk they were
running. But, for many of them, that
was the point.
Father Vladimir was at that time
a gangly young man, barely out of
his teens, and felt stultified by the
official culture dished up to Soviet
citizens like prison slop on a tray. He
had looked at yoga, at progressive
rock, at Buddhism and at all the
other bits and pieces of other
people’s cultures that drifted through
Moscow in those days. They did not
appeal. He wanted something he
could feel part of, something
Russian.
He was intrigued therefore by the
thought of a Russian priest who
refused to walk the official path, so
he took the train to Grebnevo, Father
Dmitry’s new parish. As he told me
about it, he turned to his computer
and called up a satellite image from
the internet. He zoomed us in, click
after click. First we saw the whole of
Russia, then Moscow appeared,
before it vanished to the left of the
screen as he magnified a spot to its
east. The word ‘Grebnevo’ appeared
and the village itself filled more of
the screen until we could see the
church too, in a wood on the shores
of a reservoir.
‘He asked everyone who went to
the church whether they were
christened, and there were a lot of
people who weren’t christened. But I
told him I was christened, even
though I wasn’t, and he blessed me.
My friends knew I was lying, and
told me they knew, but I insisted that
I had been christened secretly,’
Father Vladimir said, smiling at the
knots his younger self had tied
himself into.
‘I felt ashamed of having lied to
them, and to him, so when I got
back to university, I went to the
church
near
Moscow
State
University and I got christened. I did
not know the creed or anything, so
the priest was cross with me, but I
insisted and my happiness was so
great afterwards that I ran back to
the university like I was running on
air.’
At that time, getting christened
was a risky step. Many priests took
lists of these new-believers and
shared them with the authorities.
That meant being christened could
hurt your employment prospects, or
lead to attention from the security
services. Father Dmitry, to avoid
this, often christened people in his
own home and deliberately did not
write down their names. He later said
he christened thousands of adults,
sometimes a dozen a day. His rebel
attitude captivated Father Vladimir.
‘It is hard to fight a totalitarian
system. People who were scared,
who needed support, they went to
him. There were poets, artists. They
had heard of this priest that you
could talk freely to. A lot of people
sensed what I sensed, that Father
Dmitry was the most life-loving and
optimistic man we ever met, and he
was a man who had lived the hardest
life.’
His friends were surprised by
Father Vladimir’s passion. After all,
they had been the believers, not him.
His sudden conversion took them by
surprise. He caught the train to
Grebnevo the next time Father
Dmitry was speaking, then the next
time also. He devoured every word
the priest spoke, as well as those of
the older believers – Ogorodnikov
was there, of course, so were his
friends Yakunin and Regelson – and
decided to follow the priest as a
disciple: a spiritual child in the
language of Russian Orthodoxy.
‘I was a student, and I had a
room in the halls, but after that I
mainly stayed in Grebnevo. I wanted
to stop university, but Father Dmitry
thought people had to try not just to
swim with the current, but to make
something
of
themselves.
He
thought believers should not be
marginalized, but should be part of
society, so I stayed at university.’
Father Dmitry already had a son
and daughter, but he took his
spiritual children into his home as if