Russian world explained
The "Russian world" (Russian: Русский мир|lit=Russian world', 'Russian order', 'Russian community|translit='''Russkiy mir''') is a concept and a political doctrine usually defined as the sphere of military, political and cultural influence of Russia.[1] [2] [3] [4] This concept is sometimes also phrased as Pax Russica,[5] [6] [7] in parallel to the Pax Romana, and as a counterweight to the Pax Britannica of the nineteenth century and the Pax Americana after WWII.[8]
History
1990s
Major authors behind the resurrection of the concept in post-Soviet Russia include, Yefim Ostrovsky, Valery Tishkov, Vitaly Skrinnik, Tatyana Poloskova and Natalya Narochnitskaya. In 2000, Shchedrovitsky presented the main ideas of the "Russian world" concept in the article "Russian World and Transnational Russian Characteristics",[9] among the central ones of which was the Russian language. Andis Kudors of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, analyzing Shchedrovitsky's article, concludes that it follows the ideas first laid out by the 18th century philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder about the influence of language on thinking (which has become known as the principle of linguistic relativity): the ones who speak Russian come to think Russian, and eventually to act Russian.[10]
Putin era
Russia's president Vladimir Putin visited the Arkaim site of the Sintashta culture in 2005, meeting in person with the chief archaeologist Gennady Zdanovich. The visit received much attention from Russian media. They presented Arkaim as the "homeland of the majority of contemporary people in Asia, and, partly, Europe". Nationalists called Arkaim the "city of Russian glory" and the "most ancient Slavic-Aryan town". Zdanovich reportedly presented Arkaim to the president as a possible "national idea of Russia", a new idea of civilisation which Victor Schnirelmann calls the "Russian idea".
Eventually, the idea of the "Russian world" was adopted by the Russian administration, and Vladimir Putin decreed the establishment of the government-sponsored Russkiy Mir Foundation in 2007. A number of observers consider the promotion of the "Russian world" concept an element of the revanchist idea of the restoration of Russia or its influence back to the borders of the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire.[11] [12] [13]
Other observers described the concept as an instrument for projecting Russian soft power.[10] In Ukraine, the promotion of the "Russian world" became as early as 2018 strongly associated with the Russo-Ukrainian War.[14] [15] According to assistant editor Pavel Tikhomirov of, the "Russian world" for politicized Ukrainians, whose number constantly increases, nowadays is "simply 'neo-Sovietism' masked by new names". He reconciled that with the conflation of the "Russian world" and the Soviet Union within Russian society itself.[16] The Financial Times described "Russian world" as "Putin’s creation that fuses respect for Russia’s Tsarist, Orthodox past with reverence for the Soviet defeat of fascism in the Second World War. This is epitomised in the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces, 40 miles west of Moscow, opened in 2020."[17]
Russian Orthodox Church
On 3 November 2009, at the Third Russian World Assembly, newly enthroned Patriarch Kirill of Moscow defined the "Russian world" as "the common civilisational space founded on three pillars: Eastern Orthodoxy, Russian culture and especially the language and the common historical memory and connected with its common vision on the further social development".[18] [19]
Russkiy Mir is an ideology promoted by many in the leadership of the Russian Orthodox Church. Patriarch Kirill of Moscow also shares this ideology; for the Russian Orthodox Church, the Russkiy Mir is also "a spiritual concept, a reminder that through the baptism of Rus', God consecrated these people to the task of building a Holy Rus."[20]
During the Russian invasion of Ukraine
The Russo-Ukrainian War is said to implement the idea of Russian world.[21] [22] [23] The Economist states that the "Russian world" concept has become the basis of a crusade against the West's liberal culture and this has resulted into a "new Russian cult of war". It says that Putin's regime has particularly debased the "Russian world" concept with a mixture of obscurantism, Orthodox dogma, anti-West sentiment, nationalism, conspiracy theory and security-state Stalinism. It based this analysis on Putin's first public speech after 24 February 2022, wherein he praised the Russian army, using Jesus' words on love as a laying down of one's life. He also referenced Fyodor Ushakov, an admiral who is the Orthodox patron saint of the Russian Navy. Putin recalled Ushakov's words: "the storms of war would glorify Russia". The Economist also pointed to Patriarch Kirill's declaration of the godliness of the war and its role in keeping out the West's alleged decadent gay culture, and to the priest Elizbar Orlov who said that Russia's "special military operation" in Ukraine is cleansing the world of "a diabolic infection".[24]
On December 25, 2022, in an interview for the national television, Putin, apparently for the first time, openly declared that Russia's goal—not only culturally, but territorially "to unite the Russian people" within a single state.[25] In June 2023 President Putin said those who had died in the invasion "gave their lives to Novorossiya and for the unity of the Russian world".[26]
Orthodox condemnations
See main article: Volos Declaration.
In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Declaration on the 'Russian World' Teaching commonly known as the Volos Declaration that was published on 13 March called it an "ideology", "a heresy" and "a form of religious fundamentalism" that is "totalitarian in character".[27] As many as 500 Eastern Orthodox scholars allegedly were signatories.[28] They condemned six "pseudo theological facets". Those condemnations concern: replacing the Kingdom of God with an earthly kingdom; deification of the state through a theocracy and caesaropapism which deprives the Church of its freedom to stand against injustice; divinization of a culture; Manichaean demonization of the West and elevation of Eastern culture; refusal to speak the truth and non-acknowledgement of "murderous intent and culpability" of one party.[29]
In the Declaration document, it is said to be an "Orthodox ethno-phyletist religious fundamentalism".[27]
On the 2022 Sunday of Orthodoxy, the Volos Declaration was issued by 1,600 theologians and clerics of the Orthodox Church, condemning the ideology of "Russkiy Mir" as being heretical and a deviation from the Orthodox faith.[30] [31] [32]
Following this, among the Orthodox Patriarchates from the Pentarchy, two have condemned the ideology as contrary to the teachings of Christ, linking it to phyletism, an ideology condemned as an heresy by a General Synod in Constantinople in 1872.[33] The first one to do so was the Church of Alexandria and all-Africa and their Patriarch, Theodore II.[34] [35] [36] They were followed by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the first Orthodox Church in rank and honor.[37] [38]
In their epistolary exchange of early 2023, the Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew I and the Archbishop of Cyprus, George III, discussed the issue extensively.[39] [40]
See also
References
Sources
- Shnirelman . Victor A. . Victor Schnirelmann . 1998 . Archaeology and ethnic politics: the discovery of Arkaim . Museum International . 50 . 2 . 33–39 . UNESCO, Blackwell Publishers . 10.1111/1468-0033.00146 . 1350-0775 .
- Encyclopedia: Shnirelman . Victor A. . 2012 . Archaeology and the National Idea in Eurasia . The Archaeology of Power and Politics in Eurasia: Regimes and Revolutions . Charles W. Hartley . G. Bike Yazicioğlu . Adam T. Smith . 9781107016521 . . 15–36 .
Further reading
- Web site: Sintashta-Arkaim Culture . L. . Koryakova . 1998a . The Center for the Study of the Eurasian Nomads (CSEN) . https://web.archive.org/web/20060107003408/http://www.csen.org/koryakova2/Korya.Sin.Ark.html . January 7, 2006 . 16 September 2010.
- Kuznetsov. P. F.. The emergence of Bronze Age chariots in eastern Europe. Antiquity. 2006. 80. 309. 638–645. dead. https://archive.today/20120707005717/http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/080/ant0800638.htm. 2012-07-07. 10.1017/S0003598X00094096. 162580424.
- Book: Payne, Daniel P.. https://fpc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/1707.pdf. Traditional Religion and Political Power: Examining the Role of the Church in Georgia, Armenia, Ukraine and Moldova. Foreign Policy Centre. 2015. 978-1-905833-28-3. Hug. Adam. London. 65–70. Spiritual Security, the Russkiy Mir, and the Russian Orthodox Church: The Influence of the Russian Orthodox Church on Russia's Foreign Policy Regarding Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, and Armenia .
- Book: Rap, Myroslava. https://books.google.com/books?id=lF14DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA85 . The Public Role of the Church in Contemporary Ukrainian Society: The Contribution of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church to Peace and Reconciliation . 2015-06-24. Nomos Verlag. 978-3-8452-6305-2. 85–90. en. Chapter I. Religious context of Ukrainian society today – the background to research.
- Book: Orthodoxy Versus Post-Communism? Belarus, Serbia, Ukraine and the Russkiy Mir. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 2016. 978-1-4438-9538-5. Wawrzonek. Michał. Newcastle, England. Bekus. Nelly. Korzeniewska-Wisznewska. Mirella.
- News: Rocca . Francis X. . 2022-03-17 . 'Russian World' Is the Civil Religion Behind Putin's War . en-US . Wall Street Journal . 2022-03-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220317181229/https://www.wsj.com/articles/russian-world-is-the-civil-religion-behind-putins-war-11647539958 . March 17, 2022 . 0099-9660.
Notes and References
- Book: Curanović, Alicja . The Main Features of Traditional Values in Russian Discourse . The Guardians of Traditional Values: Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church in the Quest for Status . . 2015 . 8–10 . http://www.jstor.com/stable/resrep19000.6.
- Web site: The 'Russian World': Russia's Soft Power and Geopolitical Imagination . Laruelle . Marlene . Marlene Laruelle . May 2015 . Washington, DC . . 3 . 19 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191031033509/http://globalinterests.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/FINAL-CGI_Russian-World_Marlene-Laruelle.pdf . 31 October 2019 . dead.
- Valery Tishkov, The Russian World—Changing Meanings and Strategies, Carnegie Papers, Number 95, August 2008
- Tiido, Anna, The «Russian World»: the blurred notion of protecting Russians abroad In: Polski Przegląd Stosunków Międzynarodowych, Warszaw, Uniwersytet Kardynała S. Wyszyńskiego, 2015, issue 5, pp. 131—151,
- Web site: Pax Russica: Russia's Monroe Doctrine (WHP 21) .
- Pax Russica . 26995400 . Ostrow . Rachel . The SAIS Review of International Affairs . 2013 . 33 . 2 . 57–59 . 10.1353/sais.2013.0024 . 153380504 .
- Web site: Pax Russica: Will Russia's Defeat Lead to More Wars? . .
- Pax Russica: For a Eurasian Alliance Against America . 10.1111/j.1540-5842.2008.01026.x . 2008 . Dugin . Aleksandr . New Perspectives Quarterly . 25 . 4 . 56–60 .
- Web site: Shchedrovitsky. Pyotr. Русский мир и Транснациональное русское. Russian Journal. 2 March 2000. 2019-05-21. ru.
- 'Russian World'—Russia's Soft Power Approach to Compatriots Policy . . 2013-09-01 . Kudors. Andis . Russian Analytical Digest . 16 June 2010 . 81 . 10. 2–4.
- News: Abarinov. Vladimir. Sidorova. Galina. 'Русский мир', бессмысленный и беспощадный. Радио Свобода. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 18 February 2015. 2019-05-21. ru.
- Web site: Taylor. Chloe. 2020-04-02. Putin seeking to create new world order with 'rogue states' amid coronavirus crisis, report claims. 2020-09-13. CNBC. en.
- Götz. Elias. Merlen. Camille-Renaud. 2019-03-15. Russia and the question of world order. European Politics and Society. 20. 2. 133–153. 10.1080/23745118.2018.1545181. 2374-5118. free.
- Web site: Zharenov. Yaroslav. 'Русский мир' в Украине отступает, но есть серьезные угрозы. "Russian world" retreats in Ukraine, however there are serious threats. apostrophe.ua. 9 January 2018. 2019-05-21. ru.
- Web site: Путин надеется на возвращение Украины в так называемый 'русский мир' – Полторак. Poltorak: Putin hopes to return Ukraine into the so-called "Russian world". nv.ua. 5 April 2018. 2019-05-21. ru.
- Web site: Goble. Paul. Claims That Many Ukrainians 'Will Never Attend A Moscow Patriarchate Church' – OpEd. Eurasia Review. 10 September 2018. 2019-06-20.
- News: 2022-04-19 . The Kremlin's 'holy war' against Ukraine . Financial Times . 2022-05-12.
- Book: Rap, Myroslava. https://books.google.com/books?id=lF14DwAAQBAJ&q=November+3%2C+2009+Patriarch+Kirill+of+Moscow+russian+world&pg=PA85. The Public Role of the Church in Contemporary Ukrainian Society: The Contribution of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church to Peace and Reconciliation. 2015-06-24. Nomos Verlag. 978-3-8452-6305-2. 85. en. Chapter I. Religious context of Ukrainian society today – the background to research.
- Web site: Выступление Святейшего Патриарха Кирилла на торжественном открытии III Ассамблеи Русского мира / Патриарх / Патриархия.ru. Патриархия.ru. ru. Speech by His Holiness Patriarch Kirill at the grand opening of the Third Russian World Assembly. 2019-12-30.
- Web site: Russia's Orthodox Soft Power. Petro. Nicolai N.. 23 March 2015. Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. en-US. 2018-12-06.
- 2022-10-09 . The War in Ukraine Launches a New Battle for the Russian Soul . 2022-11-18 . The New Yorker . en-US.
- Russia's War in Ukraine: Identity, History, and Conflict . 2022-11-18 . www.csis.org . 22 April 2022 . en . Mankoff . Jeffrey .
- Web site: Nye . Joseph S. (Jr) . 2022-10-04 . What Caused the Ukraine War? . 2022-11-18 . Project Syndicate . en.
- News: The new Russian cult of war. The Economist. 26 March 2022.
- News: Putin Says West Aiming to Tear Apart Russia . Voice of America . 2022-12-25 . 2022-12-29.
- News: 'Internal betrayal': Transcript of Vladimir Putin's address . Al Jazeera.
- (2022) "A Declaration on the ‘Russian World’ Teaching," Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe: Vol. 42 : Iss. 4, Article 11.
- Web site: La Croix . A Declaration on the 'Russian World' (Russkii mir) Teaching. 21 March 2022.
- Web site: An Orthodox Awakening . George . Weigel. First Things. 23 March 2022. 15 May 2022.
- Web site: Orthodoxy . Public . 2022-03-13 . A Declaration on the "Russian World" (Russkii mir) Teaching . 2023-01-23 . Public Orthodoxy . en-US.
- Web site: University of Exeter . 2023-01-23 . www.exeter.ac.uk . en.
- Web site: Panagiotis . A Declaration on the "Russian World" (Russkii mir) Teaching . 2023-01-23 . Ακαδημία Θεολογικών Σπουδών Βόλου . en-GB.
- Web site: 1872 Archives . 2023-01-23 . Orthodox History . en-US.
- Web site: Ανδρείες αποφάσεις Πατριαρχείου Αλεξανδρείας: Παύει μνημόνευση Κυρίλλου, καθαιρεί Λεωνίδα, καταδικάζει "ρωσικό κόσμο" . 2022-11-23.
- Web site: Poimin.gr . 2022-11-22 . Καθαίρεση Μητροπολίτη και διακοπή της μνημόνευσης του Πατριάρχη Μόσχας . 2022-11-23 . poimin.gr . el.
- Web site: Patriarch Theodoros stops commemorating Patriarch Kirill, Russian Exarch declared defrocked by Alexandria The Paradise News . 2022-11-24 . theparadise.ng.
- Web site: NewsRoom . Bartholomew: Russian Church has sided with Putin, promotes actively the ideology of Rousskii Mir Orthodox Times (en) . 2023-01-23 . Orthodox Times . en-US.
- Web site: Govorun . Archimandrite Kirill . 2023-01-17 . The doctrine of the "Russian world" is a dualistic political religion . 2023-01-24 . The European Times . en-GB.
- Web site: Andreas Matei . 2022-12-28 . Βαρθολομαίος προς Κύπρου Γεώργιο: Δίκαιη χαρά για την εκλογή Σας . 2023-01-23 . Εκκλησία της Κύπρου . el.
- Web site: NewsRoom . Assurance of the Archbishop of Cyprus for the support to the Phanar Orthodox Times (en) . 2023-01-23 . Orthodox Times . en-US.