RUSSIA RELIGION NEWS
Monitoring news media reports about religion in Russia
and other
countries of CIS
Copyrighted material. For private use only.
If you quote material, please credit the publication from which it
came. It is not necessary to credit this Web page for any print use of
the material. If any electronic reproduction is made, please
acknowledge
the URL: http:www.stetson.edu/~psteeves/relnews/
|
|
|
Archive
of News Items
|
Abbreviations
|
Links to Useful
Information
|
Russian Ministry of Education on teaching religion
SCHOOL CHILDREN WILL STUDY HISTORY OF RELIGION IN ALMOST HALF OF
RUSSIA'S REGIONS
Religiia i SMI, 31
August 2007
Beginning 1 September, school children in more than half of the
component elements ["subjects"] of Russia will study historical and
culturological disciplines connected with the traditional religions.
"The study of the history and culture of traditional religions within
the framework of regional curricula has been organized at least in
every other subject of the Russian federation," Tatiana Petrova, deputy
head of the Department of State Policy and Legal Regulation in the
sphere of Education of the Ministry of Education and Science of the
Russian federation, reported.
She said that in approximately every tenth component element [e.g.
province, republic, or territory] the number of children studying this
subject exceeds 10,000, and in every fifth region this number is
somewhere between 1,000 and 10,000 pupils, Interfax-religiia reports.
The study of the history and culture of traditional religions,
according to the representative of the Ministry of Education and
Science, is more widespread in regions of the Central Federal District,
where "these subjects, as a rule, are based on the history and culture
of Orthodoxy." Then comes the Southern District, where "as a
consequence of the very diverse ethnic and religious composition of the
population," Petrova noted, such subjects as "Foundations of religion"
or "Religions of the world" are primarily studied.
In the Volga and Northwestern Federal Districts, the teaching of the
history and culture of traditional religions "is conducted less
intensively," the spokeswoman told the agency. At the same time, she
said, in all regions of the country these courses are studied "on an
elective basis, that is, on the basis of a voluntary selection." (tr.
by PDS, posted 1 September 2007)
FURSENKO THINKS FINAL DECISION OF TEACHING HISTORY OF RELIGIONS SHOULD
BE MADE BY SOCIETY
Religiia i SMI, 31
August 2007
At the same time, he emphasized, it must be a culturological subject
and not the "Law of God."
Minister of Education and Science Andrei Fursenko thinks that the final
resolution of the question about teaching the history of culture and
religion is up to public opinion.
Along with this, he stated in St. Petersburg, commenting on the famous
appeal of the academicians, "without a knowledge of the history and
culture of religion, including Orthodoxy, it is impossible to know and
understand the history of the country."
"And from this point of view, such knowledge is necessary. Therefore,
whether it be up to the parents of the child or the child himself,
whatever confession they may belong to, such a subject may be studied
in the schools," the minister thinks.
In addition, he stressed, "the subject itself of the history and
culture of religion is taught exclusively as a culturological subject."
"It is another conversation about textbook rivalry or teacher versus
teacher," A. Fursenko noted. "And, unfortunately, in some cases instead
of the foundations as a purely culturological subject, school children
are beginning to be filled up with dogmas of faith."
Also, in the opinion of the minister, it is impermissible that the
title of the class contain the name of any specific religion:
"This provokes a definite confrontational mood and therefore the
subject must be neutral with regard to any one faith. It seems to me
that the key problems is the preparation of quality textbooks and
qualified teachers," he added.
"On the whole, the minister is sure that "this is a question for public
discussion and in this sense the 'letter of the academicians' played a
positive role, evoking public resonance."
"It is another matter that there has been definite excess; it is
impossible to call a culturological subject the Law of God. That does
not correspond to reality," Fursenko noted. (tr. by PDS, posted 1
September 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
Lipetsk Baptists feel discrimination
BAPTIST CHURCH IN LIPETSK Ð MOST SECURE LOCATION FOR THE DEFUSING OF
EXPLOSIVES
Police choose Baptist churchyard for bomb search
Press Release, 31 August 2007
Russian Union of Evangelical Christian-Baptists
On 6 August, city authorities chose the grounds of a Baptist church in
Lipetsk south-east of Moscow for the bomb search of a local city bus.
On that Monday morning the bus and a group of police and security
officials arrived just as the congregation's pastor and a colleague
were standing in the churchyard. Church pastor Vladimir Boyev reported
later that the unwelcome, surprise visit was completely unannounced.
Entrance to the church building was immediately sealed off. Pastor
Boyev's unsuspecting wife, who arrived later, was arrested and taken to
a police station prior to her release. She had expressed the desire to
remove supplies from the building intended for a church-sponsored
vacation camp.
It soon became clear that the sniffer hounds had been mistaken Ð the
suspicious package contained nothing more than laundry soap. The
all-clear signal was given and the security forces retreated. Local
radio reported shortly thereafter: "The defusing of a city bus occurred
at the most secure location of all Ð the grounds of the Church of the
Holy Trinity." No thank you or word of apology was ever offered by
police officials.
A staff member at headquarters of the Baptist Union in Moscow asks:
"Why did they not do their inspection in an open field, at a garbage
depot or on the grounds of an unused factory? It is unthinkable that
such a check would take place in the vicinity of an Orthodox church. I
believe they wanted to make clear that Baptists are an inferior social
group"
A press release from the Russian Union of Evangelical
Christians-Baptists (RUECB) reports of discrimination and calls the
incident illegal and "simply absurd." The Lipetsk congregation has
suffered repeatedly from tensions with local authorities. (posted
31 August 2007)
Foundations of Orthodox culture
MOSCOW PATRIARCHATE REACHES A COMPROMISE
RPTsMP agreed that study of OPK is schools will not be mandatory and
now everyone should follow its example
by Mikhail Moshkin
Vremia novostei, 31 August 2007
On the eve of the beginning of the school year, hierarchs of RPTs have
begun talking again about "Foundations of Orthodox culture" [OPK]. This
time the position of the largest Russian confession, expressed by the
vice-chairman of the Department for External Church Relations,
Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin, looks like a compromise. "Teaching of
'Foundations of Orthodox culture' on a voluntary and elective basis is
the most honest and useful path. It is no accident that it is this path
that is proposed in the sample agreement regarding cooperation between
regional educational administrations and our dioceses," Fr Vsevold
declared on Thursday. The vice-chairman of OVTsS placed the accent upon
the fact that "free choice of worldview subjects" is the practice
adopted in the majority of countries of the world and it does not at
all contradict human rights and freedom: "It is believing people who
have protested against a monopoly of a single worldview in the schools,
namely materialism, including a skeptical view of religion."
In classes of OPK the subject should not be the attributes but rather
foundations of Orthodoxy and the teaching should not be in any case
"amoral and absent of worldview matters." As Fr Vsevolod noted, if one
tells school children only about the architectural features of
churches, or the technique of painting icons, or dry historical facts,
or what distinguishes an archimandrite from a metropolitan, then this
course will not fulfill its main goal and will not facilitate the moral
training of pupils. "Teaching about Orthodox culture in an aloof and
cold form and in a way that does not pertain to the human soul can
hardly change people really for the better, since the majority of
today's school children will not accept anything that does not directly
touch their heart," the representative of the patriarchate thinks.
We note, that the leadership of the Ministry of Education and Science
holds a diametrically opposed opinion. On Thursday the director of the
ministry, Andrei Fursenko, stated that this subject must not be
religious but culturological and "neutral with respect to religion."
The main problem, according to the minister, remains the shortage of
teaching staffs and the lack of quality textbooks. The latter statement
is the more curious if one considers that the textbook is already
written. The Academy of Sciences [RAN] actively has lobbied for a
resource prepared under the editorial direction of the director of the
Institute of World History of RAN, Alexander Chubarian.
In the pedagogical community itself the current position of the
patriarchate has been received as a step forward. "I am very happy that
representatives of RPTs have turned from false accusations to a very
constructive recognition that this course must be purely voluntary,"
the rector of the "Eureka" Institute of Educational Policy and member
of the Public Council of the Ministry of Education and Science,
Alexander Adamsky, emphasized. In his opinion, Fr Vsevolod Chaplin's
statement effectively puts an end to the discussion about the
introduction of OPK into the general education required curriculum. Mr.
Adamsky recalled that the original message of church hierarchs was like
this; back in 1999 Patriarch Alexis II of Moscow and all-Rus sent a
letter to the dioceses which specifically stressed the voluntary
character of the teaching of foundations of Orthodoxy.
At the same time the expert thinks that a generally required
culturological subject, "Foundations of religions," can fully coexist
with a nonmandatory parallel Law of God.
"It seems to me that teaching of the subject of "History of world
religions" within a general education school class does not contradict
the teaching on an elective basis of the foundations of religion, with
the consent of parents and the free choice of pupils," Mr. Adamsky
suggests. "This is the right of both the confessions and the citizens
that corresponds to both the constitutional principle of freedom of
conscience and the law on education."
Displaying toleration, Orthodox hierarchs say that "such a voluntary
choice must also belong to our brother Muslims, Jews, atheists,
Buddhists, and other confessional and philosophical minorities."
However, "brother Muslims" who have spoken out sharply against the
appearance of OPK in Russian schools have not changed their position.
Thus, participants in a recent All-Russian Conference of Directors of
Tatar Public Organizations in Kazan issued a declaration that "the
covert introduction of 'Foundations of Orthodox culture' by authorities
of several regions of the Russian federation into the curricula of
general education schools violates the standards of a secular state and
human rights." (tr. by PDS, posted 31 August 2007
Russian original posted on
Portal-credo.ru
site, 31 August 2007
APPROVAL OF TEXT TELLING PUPILS ABOUT CHRISTIANITY, ISLAM, JUDAISM, AND
BUDDHISM
Portal-credo.ru,
30 August 2007
On the eve of the beginning of the school year the minister of
education of the republic of Tatarstan, Nail Valeev, stated that an
experiment in the teaching of a course "History of religions" in a
number of schools of the Tatarstan republic will begin on 1 September,
a Portal-credo.ru correspondent reports.
In the event of positive results, the course may in the future become a
part of the mandatory curriculum. The "History of religions" course is
close to a historical social science block studied by pupils, and so it
will be conducted by teachers of history and social studies.
The Ministry of Education of the Tatarstan republic provided, for the
teaching and study of the new subject, a textbook of the same name that
came out under the general editorship of the director of the Institute
of Russian History of RAN, Andrei Sakharov.
The resource gives a presentation of world religions, but along with
this it ties in with the four so-called "traditional religions" of
Russia, Christianity in its Orthodox form, Islam, Judaism, and
Buddhism. The account of the history of Islam and the Islamic
ideological problem was written by the rector of the Russian Islamic
University, Rafik Mukhametshi.
(tr. by PDS, posted 31 August 2007)
NOT IN ACCORDANCE WITH GOD'S LAW
Tatar diaspora opposes teaching OPK in schools
by Irina Begimbetova
Kommersant-Kazan, 31 August 2007
The heads of Tatar public organizations sent an appeal to Russian
President Vladimir Putin against the introduction of the "Foundations
of Orthodox culture" course into the schools. They think that it will
result in children being forced to study the Law of God, cross
themselves, and perform prayers and other rituals of Orthodoxy that
will violate the principle of freedom of conscience and the standards
of a secular state. At the Ministry of Education and Science of RF it
was stated that the alarm of the Tatar diaspora was evoked by "extremes
in the provinces."
On Wednesday evening, around 150 participants in the All-Russian
Conference of Directors of Tatar Public Organizations, held in Kazan
upon the initiative of the World Congress of Tatars, adopted an appeal
to Russian President Vladimir Putin, the speaker of the State Duma,
Boris Gryzlov, and Minister of Education and Science Andrei Fursenko in
which they call for "preserving the educational heritage of the Tatar
people." As noted in the document, the alarm of the Tatar community was
evoked "by the essentially covert introduction by authorities in
various regions of RF" of the "Foundations of Orthodox culture" course
into the curricula of schools. "Under the guise of culturological
studies, the multinational and multiconfessional cohort of pupils in
modern Russian schools will actually be forced into the sorely
remembered subject of the "Law of God," when school children will learn
to cross themselves and perform prayers and other rituals of
Orthodoxy," the appeal says. In the opinion of representatives of the
Tatar diaspora, this violates the standards of a secular state that are
established in the constitution of RF, specifically, the principle of
freedom of conscience and separation of religious organizations from
the state. "And in the final analysis, this turns out to be a
violation of human rights," they emphasize.
We recall that Tatarstan has often acted as an opponent of the teaching
of "Foundations of Orthodox culture." Tatarstan President Mintimer
Shaimiev declared in August of last year that he thinks "attempts to
introduce the Orthodox subject" into educational institutions are
"profoundly mistaken." He stressed that this will never happen in
Tatarstan, regardless of any decisions made at the federal level.
Following in the president's footsteps, a protest against introduction
of the course was expressed by the executive committee of the World
Congress of Tatars. This opinion also was shared by deputies of the
Tatarstan State Council, who, in their turn, advocated the study of
several basic religions, not just Orthodox culture. A similar position
was taken by the Council of Muftis of Russia. In January of this year
its head, Ravil Gainutdin, declared that teaching of "Foundations"
violates the constitution of RF. Meanwhile, the Russian Orthodox church
has often refuted these accusations, maintaining that this is a
culturological and not a theological subject.
As a result, Tatarstan has gone its own way. Beginning tomorrow, in
several schools of the republic, children will begin elective study of
the "History of religions" on the basis of a textbook created on the
initiative of Mintimer Shaimiev by Tatar scholars under the editorial
supervision of the director of the Institute of Russian History of RAN,
Andrei Sakharov. The textbook, intended for tenth and eleventh grades,
describes the four religions that are most widely spread in Russia,
Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Buddhism. State Council Speaker Farid
Mukhametshin, who participated in the conference, suggested to the
regions that they benefit from the experience of Tatarstan and adopt
the textbook for the study of this subject by pupils, assuring the
representatives of the Tatar diaspora that "they will like the book."
The appeal still has not reached the addressees, although yesterday a
consultant for the Department of State Policy and Legal Regulation in
the Area of Education of the Ministry of Education and Science, Elena
Romanova, expressed her opinion for Kommersant: "What the
organizations of the Tatar community are concerned about possibly are
extremes in the provinces." She reported that in June the ministry sent
out to the regions a model agreement for cooperation with RPTs, but
this does not mean that RPTs is being given priority. "We simply
decided to establish a unified form of cooperation," she said. "An
accompanying letter states that such agreements may be concluded with
centralized organizations of other religions." At the same time Ms
Romanova agreed that in regions "disorders over the foundations of
Orthodox culture have been observed": in some places they really are
teaching the Law of God under this guise; in others, it is a
"culturological subject observing all the limits." She noted that
provinces may freely study the "History of religions" on the basis of
the Tatarstan textbook. "Any region has the right to decide the
question of the teaching of a regional, ethnic curriculum," she
stressed. "If the regions want to do this, no ministry has the right to
forbid them." (tr. by PDS, posted 31 August 2007)
Russian original posted on
Portal-credo.ru
site, 31 August 2007
OPEN LETTER OF PROTEST BY CITIZENS OF RUSSIA AGAINST INTRODUCTION OF
'FOUNDATIONS OF ORTHODOX CULTURE' INTO STATE SCHOOLS
Esteemed President of the Russian federation, President of the Public
Chamber, President of the State Duma Committee for Affairs of Public
Associations and Religious Organizations, and Minister of Education and
Science
We, citizens of Russia, decisively protest against attempts to
introduce the teaching of any religious confession into state schools.
And in the first place this is a protest against attempts by the
Russian Orthodox church to attain the teaching of the subject
"Foundations of Orthodox culture" (OPK) in the state schools.
While reading the suggested textbooks for the "Foundations of Orthodox
culture" course and viewing the syllabi for its teaching, we find it
obvious that OPK is not a culturological subject but teaching of the
Orthodox faith in pure form. Back in 1999, Patriarch Alexis II wrote in
his instructional letter No. 5925, of 9 December 1999:
"N. 7 If difficulties with teaching foundations of Orthodox doctrine
are encountered, then call the course 'Foundations of Orthodox
culture.' This will not evoke outbursts from pedagogues and directors
of secular academic institutions, who have been trained on an atheistic
basis."
Thereby he unequivocally affirmed that OPK was originally viewed by the
Russian Orthodox church as teaching Orthodox doctrine, and it never was
viewed by it as a culturological subject. The practical implementation
of OPK only confirms this conclusion.
Proceeding from this, we declare that the introduction of the teaching
of Orthodox doctrine in state schools violates a whole number of
provisions and regulations of existing Russian legislation.
2. OPK is not a "culturological subject," as RPTs declares. OPK
in essence and literally is the teaching of Orthodox doctrine. Its
introduction into state schools is unequivocally illegal and violates
the provision of Russian legislation that states that the sphere of
religious views lies outside the sphere of the state's competence. In
state schools there cannot be, in principle, the teaching of any faith,
since this is excluded by the secular character of education.
3. The introduction of the teaching of Orthodox doctrine within
the framework of any curriculum as a required course violates the
provision of the law that says that religious education can be
conducted only on a voluntary basis, with the consent of the children,
at the request of parents, and outside of the framework of the
curriculum.
4. Introduction of teaching OPK into state schools violates the
principle of the equality of all religions and faiths. Teaching
Orthodox doctrine in state schools, in the absence of equal preferences
by the state to all other registered confessions (not just
"traditional" ones), is a violation of the principle of the equality of
all religions before the law. In addition, it is an infringement of the
rights of all citizens of Russia who do not belong to the Orthodox
confession.
Also, alarmed about the future of our children and viewing the methods
that RPTs has adopted for introducing the teaching of its doctrine into
the state schools and the stated goals of this subject and the
opportunities for their achievement, and other possible covert goals
that OPK tries to reach, we have come to the following conclusions:
Considering the millennium-long experience of Orthodox education, the
material, temporal, and human resources that were devoted to it, the
continual support by the state (administrative resource) and, in the
end, the absence in practice of positive results in strengthening the
ethics and morality of the mass of even believers themselves, we can
conclude that at the present time there are no bases (no proven,
stable, positive results of Orthodox education, no objective reasons
for a sudden increase in the effectiveness on any scale, no indications
of any stable trends in strengthening the ethics and morality among
members of RPTs itself) to conclude that Orthodox education
accomplishes the goals stated by RPTs of strengthening morality and
ethics.
And there is no correspondence with reality in the claim by hierarchs
of RPTs about the existence of two mutually exclusive paths for human
development: the path of vice, crime, drug addiction, etc., and the
path of faith. Even the very methods of lobbying for the introduction
of OPK employed by RPTs prove that these paths can be thoroughly united
in a single person and they do not at all exclude one another. We will
not linger on the fact that the textbooks for OPK frequently contain
statements that directly offend the religious feelings of people who
profess other religions, confessions, and religious groups that are
legally registered in Russia. The very fact of the lie of the
RPTsÑestablishing the teaching of Orthodox doctrine in the schools and
the catechizing of children for increasing the number of its members
under the guise of a "culturological subject"Ñspeaks unequivocally of
the real moral character of the lobbyists of RPTs. One may draw the
conclusion that in this question RPTs is following the medieval
principle that "the end justifies the means."
None of the lobbyists for OPK admits the existence of a third way for
the development of a personÑtraining of a person who is autonomous and
responsible, understands clearly the real world and his goals, makes
independent decisions and takes responsibility for their consequences;
a person with human dignity. Lying, meanness, theft, and similar
conduct is considered by such a person as beneath his dignity, and he
does not lower himself to them by his own will and desire. This path of
training children is difficult for a teacher, but, in our opinion, it
is the only way that permits achieving the strengthening of ethics and
morality of people. Obviously, the hierarchs of RPTs have not noticed
it because this "third" way excludes the path of faith and eliminates
the possibility of directing a person to where he is isolated from the
facts of the real world and can be deceived by words operating on blind
faith.
Also great doubt in the sincerity of the goals declared by RPTs is
aroused by the fact that RPTs has tried to begin teaching OPK in state
schools with the youngest grades. Considering that the children in the
youngest grades do not have the safeguard of a critical evaluation of
information, the attempt by RPTs can have only one goalÑto catechize
our children and impose upon their consciousness an Orthodox picture of
the world and an Orthodox worldview. In addition, this worldview
hinders an objective and impartial view of other possible worldviews
and a free independent individual selection among such views as a basis
for further life, which the law of RF guarantees to us. Such "work"
with children cannot be considered a positive result. We categorically
oppose even the vague possibility of the achievement of such a result
and we demand that the state take all measures for its elimination.
We do not doubt the value of presenting to a child information about
various religions, confessions, and worldviews. But in doing this no
one should be singled out. The arguments adopted by clerics about the
"traditionality" and "large numbers" of Orthodoxy cannot be a basis for
granting to one or several religions any precedence. That is what the
law of RF declares, and all religions should be equal before it.
In order for children to receive information about cults, religions,
and faiths, currently existing courses are sufficient: history,
literature, culturology, social studies, which should impartially and
objectively inform children about all the varied religions, cults, and
worldviews, and not view them from the point of view of any one of the
religions. Only such an approach will give children the possibility of
exercising to the full their right to a conscientious, free, and
unimpeded choice of a religious confession, or a refusal of such, as is
guaranteed to us by the legislation of RF.
The rights of Orthodox believers and RPTs are already being observed.
They already now have, by law, the full right to establish educational
institutions with a religious composition. This also applies to other
citizens who confess one or another faith. And such an approach seems
fully reasonable to us.
At the present time we see violations of legislation, incompatibility
of the declared format of a "culturological subject" with its contents
(teaching Orthodox doctrine), attempts to exploit the defenselessness
of children for influencing their consciousness, and the absence in
history of positive results of Orthodox education.
As parents, it is necessary for us to completely eliminate the risk of
pedagogical mistakes in the education and training of our children. And
in this case, there is very little basis for hope that the positive
results that Orthodox education has not achieved in 1000 years will
suddenly appear now and one cannot talk about it seriously. We, as
parents, categorically oppose risking and trusting all of this for our
children.
We as parents and citizens of Russia DEMAND that the state guarantee
the education of our children in state schools without minimal risks of
pedagogical mistakes and without the possibility of the influence of
any religious faith upon them.
After all, these are OUR children.
This letter was signed by 591 persons.
(tr. by PDS, posted 31 August 2007)
Russian original posted on
Portal-credo.ru
site, 30 August 2007
METROPOLITAN KIRILL: SHOULD NOT DEPRIVE 80% OF COUNTRY
Religiia i SMI, 30
August 2007
Metropolitan Kirill emphasized that the elective teaching of OPK does
not serve as a means for dividing or discriminating against children.
He said this in an interview with the Perm newspaper "Zvezda."
"Therefore we consider that it is essential that there be in the
schools a variety and opportunity for choice; this is a sign of
progress in the educational system.
"For example, a child shows up who declares that he wants to study the
foundations of Muslim culture; that is his right. And the schools must
guarantee it. If there is one such child in a class, of course, it is
not necessary to get a teacher for him. But a textbook on the
foundations of Muslim culture must exist. And not only Muslims can
become acquainted with this textbook, but Orthodox too, if they have an
interest. We propose to our secular colleagues that they write a
textbook on the foundations of secular ethics for those children who
are not religious. That is also an alternative. They try to frighten us
with "this will divide the children." Excuse me, can physical education
classes not divide? Children suffer some embarrassment since they are
not able to run fast or jump far because of the peculiarities of their
physique. Physical education not only divides but also discriminates.
For some reason our public does not think about this, but it thinks
that having alternatives and variety in the teaching of the foundations
of religious culture inevitably divides children.
"I can give an example from Smolensk diocese. For many years now we
have been teaching foundations of Orthodox culture in the schools. And
there was a negative reaction only once. One man wrote an open letter
to me, saying that he is training his children in the traditions of
Judaism and they do not want to study the foundations of Orthodox
culture. I responded publicly that I will be the first to stand up to
defend his children's rights not to attend classes in Orthodox culture.
After some time I learned that his son, and it's an intelligent family,
is attending classes and he simply finds them interesting.
"I think that an appeal to the qualities of a multinational and
multiconfessional country must not deprive eighty percent of our people
of the possibility of studying the foundations of their spiritual and
religious culture in the schools." (tr. by PDS, posted 1 September 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
Ekaterinburg makes study of Orthodoxy compulsory
EKATERINBURG SCHOOL CHILDREN WILL BE TURNED TO GOD
Classes in "Spiritual culture of the Urals" to be introduced into city
schools
by Mariia Khudovekova, Alexander Lakedemonsky
Kommersant
Ekaterinburg, 28 August 2007
Yesterday at a press conference in Ekaterinburg a representative of the
Institute for the Development of Regional Education, Stanislav
Pogorelov, reported that beginning 1 September, as an experiment, a new
subject, "Spiritual culture of the Urals," will be introduced into
twenty schools. The course provides for the study of the culturological
foundations of the Orthodox religion. Although the diocese gives
assurance that the new subject will not promote propaganda of the cult
of Orthodoxy, Urals rights advocates fear pressure from the church on
the children.
Stanislav Pogorelov, the chair of the Department of Socio-cultural
Education of the Institute for the Devellpment of Regional Education,
reported that the academic subject "Spiritual culture of the Urals" was
developed by the Sverdlovsk Ministry of Education and the Ekaterinburg
diocese for the purpose of the spiritual and moral education of the
coming generation. It will be taught from grade five on. In contrast to
"Religious studies" Mr. Pogorelov noted, this subject is an attempt to
view religion not from the outside, but "from within," "tracing the
links of Orthodoxy with chronicle writing, icon painting, church
architecture, and literary productions." In the upper grades (10-11) it
is planned to teach a course on the culture of family relations from
the point of view of the Orthodox church.
For now the subject will appear in only twenty schools of Ekaterinburg.
According to Mr. Pogorelov, the directors of these academic
institutions agreed to the introduction of the new subject with parents
and teaching staffs. In the course of four years the Institute for the
Development of Regional Education will conduct monitoring, assessing
how the attitudes of children change with regard to studies, peers,
degree of engagement, etc. In the event of positive results, the new
subject will be added to the so-called regional curriculum, which will
be introduced into every school as desired. However, Mr. Pogorelov
emphasized, if a child attends a school where "Spiritual culture of the
Urals" is taught, he will not be able to refuse to study it.
"The spiritual values of the basic religious confessions do not
contradict one another, inculcating in the rising generation honesty,
fairness, and respect for elders, and not conflicting with other
religions," Archbishop of Ekaterinburg and Verkhotursk Vikenty gave
assurance.
However, the opinions of leaders of religious confessions are divided
on this matter. Thus the president of the Ecclesiastical Board of
Muslims of Sverdlovsk province, Mufti Sibagatulla Khadji, supports the
idea of the Orthodox diocese. "We have different paths, but the roads
are the same," he noted. At the same time one of the informal leaders
of Muslims of the mid-Urals region, Magomet Abuev, holds an opposing
point of view. He thinks that if the state gives attention to the
necessity of the spiritual training of the future generation, then it
would be proper for school children to be granted equal opportunity for
studying all of the divine scriptures, from the Old Testament to the
Holy Quran. "This will permit returning to society the understanding of
the principle of monotheism, which lay originally at the foundation of
all religions. It is known that the emissaries of the Almighty came to
earth precisely at the time when the fundamentals of faith in a single
Creator began being propagated," he noted.
The leader of the Jewish religious community in the Ekaterinburg
synagogue, Yakov Soskin, does not oppose introduction of such subjects
into the schools, but on an optional basis. "Let the ones who want it
study on a supplementary basis Orthodoxy and other religions, but
nobody should be compelled. We understand that Orthodoxy is the most
widespread religion in Russia, but the spiritual culture of the country
includes other religions confessions, too. It would be fair to talk
about their traditions, too," Yakov Soskin noted.
In contrast to representatives from the basic religious confessions,
rights advocates of the Urals are more categorical in their
assessments. The director of the "Arkhiv-otpisk" rights organization,
Alexander Livchak, fears that the "Spiritual culture of the Urals"
courts will turned out to be the study of thhe Law of God and become
one of the instruments for pressure from the church upon children.
"Russia is a secular state and nobody has the right to impose their
religious views upon children," Mr. Livchak said. (tr. by PDS, posted
29 August 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
Education Ministry proposes agreement with church
on teaching religion
DEACON ANDREI KURAEV ADVOCATES REQUIRED TEACHING OF ORTHODOX
CULTURE IN SCHOOLS
Portal-credo.ru,
29 August 2007
On the eve of the school year, Deacon Andrei Kuraev declared that
teaching Russian school children "Foundations of Orthodox culture"
should be obligatory and not voluntary.
"Foundations of Orthodox culture" [OPK] should be a required course
precisely so that non-Orthodox children can more easily be implanted
into our common Russian culture. It should not be conversion to
Orthodoxy but a description of the internal logic of the world of the
Orthodox person," Fr Andrei told Interfax in the run-up to the new
academic year.
Thus he thinks that such classes may all be obligatory, without making
a division of school children on the basis of national and religious
identity.
"So that there be no clashes and so that the Russian people not feel
that they and their sacred things are under threat on the part of
migratory streams it is important to help migrant workers to be
oriented to their locality," the agency's interlocutor said.
In Deacon Kuraev's opinion, the requirement of teaching "Foundations"
may be understood by comparison with problems of new settlers. "Here's
a person who enters an apartment that is new to him, but it already has
its own history. The original owners did not leave for him a diagram of
the electric cables and other utilities in the walls and floors. Thus
every nail hammered into the wall can hit an electric cable and lead to
fatally dangerous results," he said.
In saying this he explained that the "new settlers" are the children of
our new countrymen and the old apartment is Russia, while the electric
cables are the internal and hidden nerves, hidden energy lines,
defining the code of Russian culture."
In this way he commented upon the publication on the site of the
Ministry of Education and Science of RF of a "Sample agreement on
cooperation between departments of education of components of RF and a
centralized religious organization." In this document it is said, in
particular, that foundations of Orthodoxy can be conducted only on a
voluntary basis with freedom of choice while respecting the legal
interests and rights of other religious organizations and the
nonreligious portion of society.
"This provision, which is natural for our times, is used as a matter of
ritual. But in this case it actually turns out to be a stick in the
spokes or a fifth wheel on the wagon," Deacon Kuraev thinks.
He explained that such a provision equates on a legal basis two diverse
things: religious teaching proper and a culturological
conversation.
"If the Ministry thinks OPK is a religious subject, then such a
provision is unnecessary because the procedure for religious teaching
in the secular schools is rather clearly laid out in the law on freedom
of conscience. And that procedure explicitly speaks of voluntariness.
But if we are talking about teaching a culturological subject,
"Foundations of Orthodox culture," then why is any agreement made
between the ministry and anybody? It would be the same as concluding an
agreement between the Ministry of Education and Great Britain about how
to teach Shakespeare in Russian schools," Deacon Andrei Kuraev thinks.
In his opinion, a legal equating of classes in the culturology of
Orthodox with classes of religion proper means that "the church will
not be able to get out of its ghetto and secular children will remain
hostages to television entertainment." (tr. by PDS, posted 29
August 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
CHURCH MAY CHANGE MIND ON AUTHENTICITY OF TSARIST REMAINS BURIED
IN ST. PETERSBURG
Portal-credo.ru,
29 August 2007
In the event that the recently discovered remains of two children are
recognized to be genuinely two children of Nicholas II, the Russian
Orthodox church of the Moscow patriarchate (RPTsMP) may change its
position on the question of the authenticity of the remains that were
buried in 1998 in the imperial tomb of St. Petersburg.
"If there is confirmation of the authenticity of the new Ekaterinburg
discovery, several serious doubts of the church may be dispelled and,
in principle, the possibility is not excluded that proof of the
authenticity of these remains may result in the church's position being
changed," Archpriest Georgy Mitrofanov told Interfax on 28 August.
Mitrofanov is a professor at the St. Petersburg Ecclesiastical Academy
and a member of the synodal Commission on Canonization of Saints of
RPTsMP.
He recalled that the resolution of the Synod in 1998 said that the
"Ekaterinburg remains" that were discovered in 1979 still may not be
recognized, since there remained definite doubts of their genuineness.
One of the reasons that RPTsMP refused to recognize the "tsarist
remains" found in 1979 as genuine was the existence of two basic
versions of the investigation. The first was the result of studies by
Nikolai Sokolov, who unearthed in 1918 two fire pits in which it was
possible the remains had been destroyed. According to the second
version, the remains were discovered in our time although among them
the remains of Tsarevich Aleksei and Grand Duchess Maria were not
found, which supposedly were found in the summer of 2007.
RPTsMP proposed additional questions, the answers to which were to
clarify fully the situation, Fr Georgy recalled.
He said that the Christian church is often criticized for unreasonably
accepting any remains as saints' relics. "In this case our hierarchy
tried to take a stricter position, since taking the "first Ekaterinburg
remains" as genuine was based on purely scientific investigations,
which even from the point of view of the scholars themselves were
always viewed as relative," the priest noted.
"What is most important," he emphasized, "is that the determination of
the Synod did not consider this question closed, and now what has
happened may fully lead to the church's position being changed. But for
this it is necessary that the investigation proceed calmly and openly."
At the same time the member of the Commission on Canonization noted
that, in contrast with the first investigations, the present
investigations were made "on a much more solid basis," in which
representatives of various organizations participated, including
consultations among them.
"Information from Ekaterinburg has not become sufficiently precise and
I hope that with the current investigations there will not be that
definite closedness and vigorous disputes among the scientists
themselves, which would prevent a definitive church position," the
priest said.
"Thus," he summed up, "it seems to me that what has now occurred may
lead us to a final resolution of this question." (tr. by PDS, posted 29
August 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
Baptists say they are ignored in Moscow
THE ROAD IS STILL LONG
Initial meeting between Baptists and the administration for the Moscow
region
Press Release
Russian Union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists, 27 August 2007
The regional administration responsible for the territory is not
informed on church developments in the city of Chekhov (Moscow region)
and the ruling of the European Court for Human Rights in Strasbourg.
This became evident at an initial meeting in Moscow on 24 August
between Baptists and the ÒMinistry for Territorial Development in
Moscow RegionÓ, to which the office for church affairs belongs. The
meeting had been initiated by Vitaly Vlasenko (Moscow), Director of the
Department for External Church Relations within the ÒRussian Union of
Evangelical Christians-BaptistsÓ (RUECB). In a conversation with the
press afterwards he reported: ÒOur partners had already done some
research on us. But they knew nothing about the events in Chekhov which
have been reported on widely throughout Europe.Ó
On 26 July, the EU Court for Human Riights had sentenced the Russian
government to a payment of 6.000 euros. After the chapel in Chehov was
destroyed by fire in 2001, the congregation there had been forbidden to
meet under the open skies. Further incidents in Latoshino and
Balashikha were an additional reason for Baptists to request the
meeting.
This ministry for the region surrounding Moscow is known among Baptists
for its closeness to the Russian Orthodox Church. The ministry`s
representatives also stated in this meeting that 98% of their regionÕs
residents are of Orthodox faith. In the later press conversation
Vlasenko responded: ÒIn view of the fact that the region around Moscow
is also home to hundreds of thousands of Muslims, Jews and Ð above all
Ð atheists, this number can only be regarded as pure fiction.Ó
The second Baptist present at the meeting was the businessman Alexander
Semchenko (Moscow), who represents Protestants in the political
ÒAdvisory Council for Cooperation with Religious Associations at the
Seat of the President of the Russian FederationÓ. He remarked in the
meeting that Baptists did not expect big changes immediately. Yet the
RUECB would always be ready to develop relations with this local
administration. He added in the meeting: ÒWe want to help the people of
Moscow region grow in their knowledge of God. We want to help them be
good citizens, and we also want to teach our young people to be such.Ó
In his conversation with the press Pastor Vlasenko concluded: ÒThe
meeting did not fulfill all of our expectations. The road is still
long. But we want to be patient and not lose the hope that we will
someday still meet with Regioinal Governor Boris Gromov, for he is an
important figure.Ó Primary government representative at the meeting was
Sergei Komarov, Vice-Minister for Territorial Development in the Moscow
region.
The RUECB, RussiaÕs largest Protestant free church, has roughly 75.000
adult believers active in 1.300 local churches and groups. Its
President is Yuri Sipko (Moscow). (posted 27 August 2007)
Russia
Religion News Current News Items
If material is quoted, please give credit to the publication from
which it came.
It is not necessary to credit this Web page. If material is transmitted
electronically, please include reference to the URL,
http://www.stetson.edu/~psteeves/relnews/.