Posted on 11/06/2009 2:16:38 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
Even as Moscow celebrates a holiday with anti-Catholic undertones and as Orthodox Patriarch Kirill promotes a special role for Russias traditional religions of which Catholicism is not one, the Catholic archbishopric in Moscow and the Catholic bishopric in Novosibirsk have launched websites to promote Catholicism in Russia.
Last Friday, Paul Pezzi, the Catholic archbishop in Moscow, announced the start of a website for his see at www.cathmos.ru, a site that he said would allow Russians to find out about the structure and news of the archdiocese, acquaint themselves with official documents, and learn the addresses of Catholic parishes in Russia.
The cleric said that the new site was the brainchild of Father Aleksandr Khmelnitsky, who had headed the Information Service of the archdiocese from 2007 to this year and that the site, which he indicated remained under construction will develop to try to meet the needs of its visitors.
Three days later, the Transformation Bishopric of Novosibirsk announced the launch of its own site, www.sibcatholic.ru, which will perform the same functions but also serve as a primary distribution arm of an electronic version of the Sibirskaya Katolicheskaya Gazeta which the diocese has been issuing in a limited hard copy edition since 1996.
Three aspects of this development, which Blagovest-info.ru reported on Tuesday (www.blagovest-info.ru/index.php?ss=2&s=3&id=30621), are especially intriguing. First, it shows that the Catholic Church in Russia has now decided, much as Protestant groups and Muslims already have, to use the Internet to spread the faith.
Second, this high-visibility public stance puts the Catholic Church on a collision course with Patriarch Kirill, who not only insists that only Russias traditional faiths should enjoy full support in Russia but who actively opposes any missionary activity by any religious group directed at members of nationalities that are historically associated with other faiths.
Because the patriarch insists that members of the Russian nation are by definition Orthodox, he and his church are likely to view the appearance of these Catholic websites, which explicitly are directed at attracting Russian speakers to the faith of Rome, as a violation of the rules of the game as Kirill believes they should be understood.
Some Russian Orthodox hierarchs -- but not Kirill himself -- have even suggested that Catholicism should be treated like any other extremist sect. However, because Kirill is actively seeking a rapprochement with the papacy, he will have to constrain them. Indeed, it may be that the Catholic leadership in Russia decided to take advantage of the patriarchs dilemma.
And third, these sites and the Catholic faith that informs them are appearing at a time when anti-Catholic sentiments in Russia appear to be on the rise. Not only did the Day of National Unity occur on the anniversary of the expulsion of Catholic Poles from Moscow in 1612, but recent comments on Aleksandr Nevsky have included anti-Catholic messages.
As many Russian writers argued last year, Nevsky was justified in concluding an alliance with the Mongol khans because the Teutonic knights represented not just the German emperor but also the Roman pope. Had he acted along religious lines, they argue, Russia would have been converted to Catholicism and reduced to a kind of Eastern Poland.
That such arguments resonated with Russian audiences who are typically more inclined to accept a clash of civilizations model which defines the basic divide in Eurasia between Christianity, on the one hand, and Islam, on the other, underscores just how sensitive such Russians are likely to be to any expansion of Catholicism in Russia today.
Because that is what these two new websites are intended to do, many Russians both inside the Orthodox Church and beyond will be watching them closely, and because they will be doing so, those concerned about religious freedom in Russia will have to keep track of both what these sites carry and how many Russians in fact visit them.
Russia Owes Its Greatness to the Golden Horde, Gainutdin Says - September 28, 2009 - Ravil Gainutdin, the head of the Union of Muftis of Russia (SMR), has touched off a firestorm by his comments about the role of Islam in the past and future of Russia, a reminder if one is needed of how sensitive almost all historical events are in that country and how closely they are bound up with current assessments of the future.Speaking to a Moscow conference on Russia and the Islamic World: A Partnership in the Name of Stability last Thursday, Gainutdin first developed the oft-cited observation of Russian historian M.N. Karamzin that Moscow owes its greatness to the khans of the Golden Horde (www.blagovest-info.ru/index.php?ss=2&s=3&id=29888).
The Moscow mufti added that this assessment applies to Russia as a whole because the first massive state unification of Russian Orthodox and Turkic Muslim peoples took place in the 13-14th centuries within the borders of the Golden Horde, when thanks to the political will of [its] khans the assembling of the divided Russian principalities around Moscow began.
Arguing that the nature of this origin of the Russian state underscores the importance of Islam within the Russian state and society in the past, Gainutdin then argued that Islam is fated to play an even greater role in that country and its place in the world now and in the immediate future.
Gainutdin cited the words of the Tatar writer, editor, and philosopher Ismail-bey Gasprinsky (1851-1914) that in the perhaps not distant future, Russia is fated to become one of the remarkable Muslim states...
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