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#13 - JRL 7005
Ignoring constitutional bar, Russian schools make
religion the fourth R with Orthodox culture classes
January 4, 2003
By SARAH KARUSH
YAMKINO, Russia (AP) -- A small statue of Vladimir Lenin presides over the
lobby of this village's public school. But upstairs, some second graders are
getting a lesson decidedly at odds with the state atheism imposed by the Soviet
Union's founding father.
They're learning about the theology of the Russian Orthodox Church.
School administrators in the Noginsk district, with some 20,000 students
about 22 miles southeast of Moscow, have added religion to the curriculum as a
moral framework to replace Lenin's now discredited communist dogma.
After a recent endorsement from the Education Ministry, such programs look
set to spring up around the country -- despite a federal law prohibiting
religion in schools and the Russian constitution's separation of church and
state.
Human rights groups worry that bringing the dominant Russian Orthodox Church
into public schools will upset the country's fragile ethnic peace.
Officials in Noginsk and the local priests who helped develop the class,
"The Fundamentals of Orthodox Culture," say their version of the
subject is respectful to other faiths. They say they are merely exposing
students to the country's traditional religion, which they consider essential
for understanding Russia, its art and its literature.
School officials are quick to point out that anyone can opt out of the class.
In Yamkino, one Muslim first-grader gets extra art and music lessons while her
schoolmates study Orthodoxy.
The Rev. Igor Gagarin, who trained Noginsk teachers in the new subject, said
the class differs from God's Law, the czarist-era theology course that was
mandatory for all Russian schoolchildren.
"We're not teaching people to pray," he said. "God's Law
assumes everyone studying it is a believer. We don't say this. We say we want to
teach you about the faith, and you can decide for yourself whether to be a
believer or not."
On a recent day in Yamkino, a group of 7- and 8-year-olds listened as teacher
Yelena Zvonova talked about the birth of Jesus, "our savior."
Zvonova described how Mary and Joseph arrived in Bethlehem and no one would
give them shelter. She then asked the class where Jesus was laid after he was
born.
Several hands shot up. "On hay!" answered one boy.
"On straw," Zvonova said, nodding. "So, you see kids, Christ
began to suffer for people from his birth."
Zvonova told the children that Jesus' birth is celebrated Jan. 7 -- Christmas
according to the Orthodox calendar. She did not mention that Catholics and
Protestants, of whom there are small communities throughout Russia, celebrate
the same event Dec. 25.
The Russian Orthodox Church has tense relations with other churches, and
Russian Catholics and Protestants contend they must struggle with official
discrimination. The government expelled five foreign-born Catholic priests in
2002.
Teachers and priests say the Orthodox classes give children a moral compass
in a society increasingly plagued by alcoholism, drugs and violence.
"These lessons in goodness give children a chance to resist the flow of
lies and aggression," said the Rev. Mikhail Yalov, the archpriest of
Noginsk's Cathedral of the Epiphany.
Introduced into Noginsk classrooms in 1998, the religion course has been well
received by students and parents, officials say.
"It's refreshing for the soul," said Lyuba Kazarina, 15.
For Noginsk residents who want to learn about Orthodoxy outside public
school, there is no shortage of opportunity. Besides Sunday school, the
cathedral runs a parochial school, and Yalov and other priests lead frequent
retreats for young people.
Nevertheless, Yalov argues that cooperation between the town's Orthodox and
secular leaders is essential. "The church is the soul of the state,"
he said.
In November, the Education Ministry put its backing behind Orthodox culture
classes, already taught in several regions, by sending all schools a recommended
syllabus for the course.
Minority religious leaders have been muted in their response to the
initiative.
The Spiritual Board of Muslims in European Russia said it had no objection as
long as the course is optional. Berel Lazar, one of Russian Jews' chief rabbis,
said that the country was not ready for such a program but that he could accept
it if classes in other religions were made available as well.
Legal experts and liberal politicians have been harsher.
"Even if it is an elective, it is still within the framework of the
school program and still at the government's expense," said Anatoly
Pchelintsev, director of the Moscow-based Institute of Religion and Law.
Pchelintsev said teaching religion in schools will only heighten tensions
between ethnic Russians and minorities. Violence aimed at people from the mostly
Muslim Caucasus Mountains has been rising in major cities, and anti-Jewish
incidents occasionally are reported.
The Movement for Human Rights asked prosecutors in June to open a case
against the Education Ministry for endorsing an Orthodox culture textbook that
says the Jews forced Pontius Pilate to crucify Jesus because "they thought
only about power over other peoples and earthly wealth." Prosecutors
refused, and the group is challenging that decision in court.
In addition to attacking Jews, the textbook accuses Russia's non-Orthodox
"guests" of "not always behaving nobly in the traditionally
Orthodox state."
It is unclear whether the book has been put to use in any schools. Noginsk
schools use their own materials.
Supporters of Orthodox culture classes so far have been more vocal than
opponents. On Dec. 15, several hundred people gathered with icons and crosses in
front of the Education Ministry, saying they were defending ethnic Russians'
right to know their culture.
Like all religious institutions, the Russian Orthodox Church was crippled
under communism. Many churches were destroyed, and churchgoers were persecuted.
So isn't it odd that the Yamkino school continues to pay homage to Lenin as
it embraces the church? Zvonova, the teacher, sees no reason to remove the
statue.
"That's also part of our history," she said.
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