Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
hooliganism, moral decay, for the
strengthening of the family . . . but
you are not being blamed for this,
the Soviet government is fighting
this too.’ He had always said the
reason he did not work with the state
was because it was spreading
distrust, profiting from the sales of
alcohol, encouraging abortion. Now,
he had changed his mind.
And he apologized to the bishops
too. He said he had been wrong to
lecture them when he should have
been listening and obeying. By
publishing books abroad, he had
given ammunition to the state’s
enemies. ‘Do you really think that in
the West they understand us better
than we understand ourselves? Even
the ethnic Russians who live there,
they long ago lost touch with their
homeland and what is happening
here.’
He rejected his self-published
newspaper. He rejected the books he
had written. He named specific
foreigners – a journalist from the
New York Times
, an American
professor, a Belgian bishop – who
had helped him, at significant risk to
themselves,
by
smuggling
his
writings out the country. He named
foreigners who had tried to bring
foreign-published works into the
country and who campaigned for
believers’ rights. And he rejected
them all. ‘I now understand that
foreigners who interfere in our
internal affairs will bring us nothing
but harm.’ He banned the further
publication of his books. He wanted
to make a clean break with the past,
and to start again with a new
message. There would be no more
talk of boycotts, of resistance.
‘We live on Soviet land,’ he
wrote in conclusion.
And we must obey the laws
of
our
country.
Disobedience to its laws will
above all bring harm to our
country,
disperse
our
internal strength, and bring
unnecessary suffering. We
must think not just of
ourselves,
but
of
our
families, of those who travel
with us . . . now, when there
is an external danger, we
need all to unite and work
together
with
our
government and our people,
which were given us by
God and before whom we
are all responsible.
On my return from the Arctic, I
visited
Tanya
Podrabinek,
the
Muscovite I had befriended in the
north the previous summer, at her
home in the Moscow suburb of
Elektrostal. There her husband Kirill
told me how Father Dmitry’s
Izvestia
article sped through the
camps system, and was used by
prison guards to assault dissidents’
morale. By summer 1980, Kirill was
close to the end of a three-year
sentence he had received after he and
his brother Alexander refused to
abandon their investigations into
military
hazing
and
punitive
psychiatry.
‘It was three weeks before the
end of my term, and the prosecutor
came to talk to me. This was in
1980, in June, and he brought me
that
copy
of
Izvestia
,
the
newspaper,’ Kirill said.
I had a spare photocopy of the
article and handed one to Kirill, and
we sat and read it through together.
It was the first time Kirill had seen it
since that June day in 1980 when he
was
anticipating
his
imminent
release. He finished and handed it
back. He seemed keen to get rid of it
as quickly as he could.
‘The prosecutor gave it to me,
and he said: “Look, what your
friends are saying,”’ Kirill said. ‘I
told this prosecutor that Dudko was
a priest and not a fighter. Perhaps I
was not fair because among those
priests there were tough ones too,
but
I
think
the
prosecutor
understood.’
It is obvious why the prosecutor
showed the article to Kirill. This was
a
propaganda
coup
for
the
government of almost unparalleled
magnitude. A senior dissident was
calling on anyone who opposed the
government to give up the struggle
and obey its orders. All over the
country, political prisoners were
being shown the article and offered a
deal: surrender and be released.
Kirill refused to surrender, however,
and retribution was swift. A new
court case was quickly arranged, and
he received three more years under
the law that criminalized any
comments deemed to be anti-Soviet.
He had been careless in whom he
spoke to.
Although
Father
Dmitry’s
betrayal of his ideals did not work
on Kirill, the Soviet government
expected it to have a major effect on
society at large. It was better even
than a show trial, with the staged
humiliation and then execution of an
opponent. By breaking a dissident,
parading them and releasing them,
you showed that the reward for
submission was a new life, rather
than death. Previously, in the 1930s,
the state had just wielded its power
to crush opponents. Now, it had
learned finesse.
Father Dmitry also addressed a
letter to the patriarch, dated the same
day as the
Izvestia
article, which was
published
with
presumably
deliberate understatement on page 40
of the Patriarchate’s official journal.
‘My first words are: forgive me,’
Father Dmitry wrote. He signed off
with the words: ‘the humble novice
of Your Holiness, who is not worthy
of calling himself a priest but, if you
will allow it, I will dare to sign
myself, the unworthy priest D.
Dudko’.
Patriarch Pimen, the man before
whom he abased himself and whom
he was asking for forgiveness, was
someone who had praised the ‘lofty
spiritual qualities’ of Andropov, the
K G B chairman who locked
Christians
in
mental
hospitals.
Patriarch Pimen had singled out the
‘titanic work in the cause of
international
peace’
done
by
Brezhnev, under whom the Soviet
Union invaded both Czechoslovakia
and Afghanistan. He had won the
Order of the Red Banner for his
‘great patriotic activities’, at a time
when his priests were being arrested.
If anyone needed forgiveness it was
the patriarch, but it was Father
Dmitry who was asking for it.
On 21 June, the day after his
television
appearance,
he
was
released from prison. He had been
inside just over six months. His wife
Nina told foreign journalists that he
was tired and turned them away
when they tried to talk to him. A
couple of days later he released a
statement for them: ‘Leave me in
peace, stop trying to pull me into
some kind of politics, I am just an
Orthodox priest, and one on Russian
soil.’
Tanya’s husband Kirill refused
to judge Father Dmitry for what he
had done, but was ruthless in his
assessment.
‘I just think he was weak. There
are several different elements here. If
you are weak, do not invite attack.
That is the first thing. Secondly, it is
one thing if you just answer for
yourself, it is another if you answer
for others. Around Dudko was a
group of young people that he had
gathered around himself, and his
recantation was a heavy blow to
them.
‘He showed weakness, and that
was far from harmless to those
around him. The prosecutor came
with this statement to me, for
example. And the third element,
which is the most important, is that if
you show weakness, you should
retire from public life afterwards.
You should not shout out again, but
he did live a public life afterwards
and that is not good.’
Father Vladimir’s assessment at
the time was far harsher. When
Father Dmitry, his spiritual father,
had been in detention, he had battled
to keep his plight noticed in the
world’s media at considerable risk to
himself. It had, it seemed, all been
for nothing.
‘I would not say they fooled
him, rather they broke him. I
stopped going to see him then. A lot
of people left and did not come
back, they all said he had been
broken. And if he was broken, then
he was not from God because a
martyr should not be broken,’ he
said, still with his head lowered.
Inside Father Dmitry’s flat, behind
the
door
closed
against
the
journalists, he faced his family. His
wife, ever understanding, was just
pleased to have him back. But his
son – who would grow up to be a
priest himself, but at the time was a
student who had faced harassment of
his own for his Christian beliefs –
was angry, red in the face. Even his
eyes were red, Father Dmitry wrote
later.
‘What is wrong with you? Have
you gone mad?’ his son demanded.
‘What? Well, you’re still young.
And how would you survive without
me? I haven’t rejected God and the
Church,’ Father Dmitry replied.
‘I don’t know what I will do
now at college. I would like to
vanish off the face of the earth.’
One of Father Dmitry’s spiritual
children expressed the shock and
concern of them all in an open letter:
‘I, Marina Lepeshinskaya, accuse the
organs of the K G B of the murder
of my spiritual father.’ The Western
journalists kept coming to the door,
asking to see him, just to see what he
looked like, just to talk to him, to ask
him to explain himself, but Father
Dmitry stayed in his room.
On the second day, he wrote, he
hid away and cried, as he began to
see quite how enormous a step he
had taken. His wife’s sister, walking
home, was grabbed by a terrified
woman who said that his former
disciples wanted to kill him because
he had sold them out. His sister-in-
law rushed home. He told her that
there was nothing to worry about,
but they still went outside to check,
and he decided never to sleep alone
in case the threat was real.
Perhaps, while he stayed inside,
he re-read the statement he had
written for
Izvestia
, and saw the
names of the people, people who
h
a
d previously
considered
themselves to be his friends, whom
he had accused of wanting to
undermine the state and wanting to
harm the Russian people.
Desperate in his guilt, he wrote
to one of them, Archbishop Vasily
of Brussels. ‘If you had told me that
I would behave like this, then I
would have considered it as slander.
But it appears that I overestimated
my powers, I have fallen so low, like
no one before me,’ he wrote. ‘I have
never suffered such torments as
now. I now know from my own
experience what hell is. I am ready
to do anything to correct the
situation, but I don’t know how.’
He
did
not
want
to
see
journalists, and he did not want to
see accusing faces around him, so he
fled to the countryside, where he
issued a statement for his spiritual
children. He tried to summon up the
old fire, the old arguments, as if
nothing had happened. ‘The first
thing I beg of you is don’t separate,