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Religion and Social Control in the Soviet Union 1945–1964

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Gavin White*
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow

Extract

Why have churches in the U.S.S.R. been harassed in recent years? It has been supposed by many that if Stalin stopped most persecution during the Second World War, then things under Khrushchev could only improve. Instead they deteriorated, and all liberties of Soviet citizens received more respect except the religious.

A common answer has been that the Soviet authorities were horrified by the continued hold of religion which they considered to be a threat to Marxism. Such a view is quite popular in the west where a clash of ideologies, with Christianity triumphing over Marxism, consoles churchmen who cannot find such a triumph in their own society. But this assumes that the Soviet rulers consider Christianity to be a religion based on certain tenets, and as Marxists they cannot be expected to do so. For them religion is primarily an instrument of social control.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1984

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References

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7 Ibid p 333.

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9 Ibid p 167.

10 Ibid p 125.

11 [Lazar] Volin, [A Century of Russian Agriculture: from Alexander II to Khrushchev] (Cambridge Mass. 1970) p 193.

12 Ibid p 234.

13 Ibid p 108.

14 [Hélène] Carrère d’Encausse, Le Pouvoir Confisqué [: Gouvernants et Gouvernés en U.R.S.S.] (Paris 1980) p 397.

15 Volin p 428.

16 Ibid p 478.

17 Ibid pp 420, 427, 528.

18 Ibid p 422.

19 [William O.] McCagg, [Stalin Embattled 1943–1948] (Detroit 1978) pp 247, 248.

20 Volin p 164

21 Martin McCauley ed, Communist Power in Europe 1944–1949 (London 1977) p 44.

22 Carrère d’Encausse, Le Pouvoir Confisqué p 396.

23 Tucker p 152.

24 [Edward] Crankshaw, [Khruschev] (London 1966) pp 166, 179.

25 [Werner G.] Hahn, The Politics of Soviet Agriculture 1960–1970 (Baltimore 1972) p 68.

26 McCagg pp 21, 86, 98, 120.

27 Carrère d’Encausse, Le Pouvoir Confisqué pp 55, 94.

28 McCagg pp 93, 131, 179–180.

29 Ibid pp 118–120.

30 Werner G. Hahn, Postwar Soviet Politics: the Fall of Zhdanov and the Defeat of Moderation 1946–53 (Ithaca 1982) p 122.

31 Roy Medvedev, Khrushchev (Oxford 1982) pp 90, 91.

32 Ibid p 213.

33 Roy A. Medvedev, Zhores A. Medvedev, [Khrushchev: The Years of Power] (London 1977) pp 150–181.

34 Ibid p 37.

35 Volin p 199.

36 Ibid p 476.

37 Hahn, The Politics of Soviet Agriculture 1960–1970 p 190.

38 Carrère d’Encausse, Le Pouvoir Confisqué p 157.

39 Roy A. Medvedev, Zhores A. Medvedev p 85.

40 Carrère d’Encausse, Le Pouvoir Confisqué pp 140, 141.

41 Roy A. Medvedev, Zhores A. Medvedev pp 118–121.

42 Crankshaw p 135.

43 Ibid p 200.

44 Edward Allworth ed, Ethnic Russia in the U.S.S.R.: The Dilemma of Dominance (New York 1980) pp 46, 78, 111; Carrère d’Encausse, L’Empire Éclaté p 341.

45 Tucker p 150.