The Future of Religion and Religious Freedom in Russia
Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe
Volume 21 | Issue 5
Article 3
10-2001
The Future of Religion and Religious Freedom in
Russia
Sharon Linzey
George Fox University, Newberg, Oregon
Iakov Krotov
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Linzey, Sharon and Krotov, Iakov (2001) "The Future of Religion and Religious Freedom in Russia," Occasional Papers on Religion in
Eastern Europe: Vol. 21: Iss. 5, Article 3.
Available at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree/vol21/iss5/3
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The Future of Religion and Religious Freedom in Russia
Sharon Linzey and Iakov Krotov
Sharon Linzey, Assistant Editor of Religion in Eastern Europe is Professor of
Sociology at George Fox University, Newberg OR; Iakov Krotov, an earlier
contributor to REE, is a journalist on religion, living in Moscow. This article was
originally published in Russian in Kontinent, Moscow, Russia. May 2000.
Ascertaining the changes in the religious thinking of Russian citizens since the collapse
of the Berlin Wall is difficult for several reasons. For one thing, during the Communist era,
whatever sociological data there was (and there wasn’t much) was collected, treated, and
conformed to ideological presuppositions before publishing. There was no independent research
or independent sociologists.
When Boris Yeltsin took the helm of the Russian government, the focus of East European
scholars and politicians was on the political and economic changes. Russians and Westerners
alike marveled that Solshenitsyn’s works could now be published in Russia, the monuments of
Lenin were crashing down and “private enterprise” appeared to be developing. Sovietologists
were rebuked for their inability to forecast these developments. But now that we have reached
the end of the 1990’s it is clear that Communism and its way of thinking has not disappeared at
all and in fact is more tenacious in its hidden forms.
Today we know that the economic changes since the collapse of the USSR are not as
great as we had hoped. Central planning may have been crushed, but the free-market system that
replaced it proved to be as corrupt and more harmful to Russia than the system it had replaced.
Today we feel foolish for our expectation that post-Soviet “democracy”, bureaucracy, and
capitalism should have resembled its counterpart in the West. In their desire to be “successful”
like America, Russian citizens grasped at everything American: politics, economics, and even
religion in the effort to emulate the West. As a result we have seen the aggressiveness of
Communism transformed into the aggressiveness of nationalism.
In the absence of an
independent court system, the media, political establishment and private enterprise bears little
resemblance to their Western counterparts. Despite the increasing awareness of the limited
change in this part of the world, there is one sphere of life where changes in the post-Soviet era is
quite real, and that is in the arena of religious consciousness.
In April 1997 Tatyana Kutkavets led a research team of sociologists from the Institute of
Sociological Analyses to study how Russian religious thinking has changed since the downfall of
Communism. They focused on three things: faith, values, and the political aims of modern
Russian Society.1 They polled 1593 people from all regions of the country and asked a political sociologist (Denis Dragunsky) and
a Russian Orthodox theologian (Andrey Zubov) to formulate questions to reflect three attitudes toward religiosity: (1). “Russian
Orthodox,” (2) “Protestant,” and (3) “Secular.” Westerners might interpret these categories to imply (1) “pietistic,” strict, or even
repressive; (2) “common sensical,” rational, or “free;” and (3) “secular,” cynical, or even anarchical, respectively.
The first question concerned one’s understanding of life in general and included three possible answers: (1) “We only live
once, so we should not waste time on pleasure” (Russian Orthodox); (2) “We only live once, so we must be responsible for all our actions
and do as much as we can in all spheres of life” (Protestant); and (3) “We only live once, so we should eat drink and be merry for as long
as we can” (Secular/anarchical).
The sociologists were puzzled to see that most respondents had no difficulty selecting one of these three points of view. In all
questions combined, the answer “I don’t know” was used by less than 1% of the respondents. The sociologists were fascinated to see the
consistency with which the majority of respondents (about 60-65%) consistently selected the “Protestant” position. The repressive
“Russian Orthodox” position attracted about 10% of the respondents and the “Secular” position about 25%.
Admittedly, we may be seeing the researchers’ own simplified interpretations of “Protestantism” and the “secular spirit”, as
well as the stereotypes that Russian intellectuals have about the West. “Protestantism” to the Russians means freedom to be responsible.
They see in the secular “a-religious” view the individual’s privileges without obligations and a corresponding absence of moral strictures
to confine the individual will. The Russian Orthodox or strict pietistic position views the burden of the strict, almost ascetic, life shifted to
the institutional Church. It is interesting to note that most all intellectuals, including the Orthodox theologian who helped devise the
questions, viewed the Russian Orthodox view as the most infantile and paternalistic position of the three.
Another study done at the same time involved the collaboration of Russian and American sociologists. They polled 4000 young
people aged 17, 24, and 31, to ascertain their views of private property rights. One question asked whether individuals should be able to
(1) sell land, (2) to sell land with restrictions, or (3) to sell land without restrictions. (In Russia the freedom of what one may do with
private property is still highly debated and questioned and not at all taken for granted as it is in the West.) In Moscow all land is still the
property of the city government. You may own a building on the land, but not the land itself.
Ten percent of these respondents said they were totally against the private ownership of land, 25% said that owners should be
able to sell land with no restrictions, and 53% favored private property of land with restrictions.2 In Russia, the defense of private
1
Andrey Zubov, “Yedinstvo i razdeleniya sovremennogo russkogo obschestva: vera, aekzistentsialniye tzennosti I
politichesliye tseli” (Unity and division of the modern Russian society: Faith, existential values, and political aims),
Znamya, 1998, #11.
2
Svy (...truncated)