COMMON
DENOMINATOR OF PERSONAL FREEDOM
"This
case is dangerous for society as a whole," according to Jehovah's
Witness attorney Galina Krilova.
NG-religii, 28 November 2001
The
reopened case against the "Society of Jehovah's Witnesses" could
not leave us indifferent. We have decided to acquaint our readers with two
differing points of view on the activity of this society. This edition
contains material from the Jehovists' attorney Galina Krylova and an
interview with the senior aide of the prosecutor of the Northern
Administrative District, Tatiana Kondratieva, who initiated the suit in this notorious case.
In
addition, we are publishing a note in which the teachings of the Jehovists
are laid out and attention is called to several interesting facts of their
history.
In
the Golovin Intermunicipal Court of the city of Moscow, the case dealing
with the application by the prosecutor of the northern district for the
liquidation of the religious society "Jehovah's Witnesses" in
Moscow was begun again on 30 October 2001. I will recount the prior story
of the case.
Since
1994 anticult committees have persistently appealed to various state
structures demanding the prohibition of the activity of "Jehovah's
Witnesses." Their declarations have frequently included examinations
of the religious organization, including criminal cases opened in
Petersburg, Moscow, Kazan, and other cities. All criminal cases have been
dismissed on bases that were exculpatory—nothing criminal has been found
in the activities of the Jehovah's Witnesses.
Then
the Committee for the Protection of the Family and Individual of St.
Petersburg and the Committee for the Rescue of Youth of the city of Moscow
in 1996 appealed in court requesting the liquidation of the Russian
Administrative Center of Jehovah's Witnesses and seeking compensation of
100 billion rubles. In 1998 the city court of St. Petersburg ruled that,
in accordance with existing legislation, the committees did not have the
right to bring such suits to court. Only prosecutors and agencies of
justice have such rights.
The
main weight of the burden was transferred to the religious congregation in
Moscow, which numbered about 10,000 persons. The criminal case that was
opened on the basis of the anticultists' complaints was closed four times
since nothing criminal had been found in the activity of the society and
its members. Moreover, in the ruling closing the criminal case on 28
December 1997 the investigator stated directly: "Analyzing the list
of charges from the Committee for the Rescue of Youth regarding the
violation of the constitutional rights of citizens by the religious
organization of Jehovah's Witnesses, the investigation has come to the
conclusion that the statements by the Committee for the Rescue of Youth
are based on an active rejection of this specific religious organization
and on a refusal to grant its members the possibility of exercising their
constitutional rights by reason of their religious confession."
However the anticultists have consistently issued a flood of complaints to
all instances and, when the prosecutor's office again closed the criminal
case in April 1998 it sent to the court, at the same time, an application
for the liquidation of the congregation. This time the order to close the
case employed directly the conclusions of the anticultists: The Jehovah's
Witnesses are a powerful totalitarian sect of worldwide dimensions that
"inflames hatred toward traditional religions and religious movements
of the Russian Orthodox church, which leads to the destruction of national
traditions in the minds of the younger generation."
In
court the prosecutor took on the role of the defender of national
traditions, supporting her conclusions with exclusively doctrinal
literature or the conclusions of experts of various specialties,
essentially dealing in theology incompetently. The absence of any specific
instances of violation of existing legislation by the society or its
members led to victory on 23 February 2001 by the Jehovah's Witnesses in
this case that had dragged on since the spring of 1998, although the
decision was overturned on 30 May 2001 by the Moscow city court with the
recommendation that the court of the first instance order a new expert
analysis of the society's literature.
Now
there is a new attempt with these sides but before a differently composed
court. This is a precedent-setting case inasmuch as it is the first
attempt in judicial practice to liquidate a religious organization on the
basis of the extremely vague fourteenth article of the discriminatory law
"On freedom of conscience and religious associations," and it
undoubtedly will determine how it will be applied in the future.
Two
weeks of hearings in the case only strengthened the long emerging opinion
that the case is of a political nature. Judge for yourself.
In
1998 the prosecutor petitioned for the participation in the case of the
anticult Committee for the Rescue of Youth, which is the very one that
requested the liquidation of the religious organization in Petersburg and
upon whose declarations and materials the criminal case had been
investigated. Since the petition bore an illegal character, it was
rejected by the court. But just like previously, this time Mrs. Riabinkina
openly introduced into the case for the prosecution all the
"incriminating" literature of the heretics and Mr. Gerasimov,
who had testified as a witness for the prosecution in 1999, was summoned
to testify now also.
In
1998, both inside and outside the chamber of the trial, cossacks and
Barkashovites had stood in a threatening manner, declaring that they had
shown up to preserve public order. The prosecutor requested the
participation in the case of State Duma deputy Vladimir Lysenko. The
respectable parliament member from the Moscow district evidently had
actually decided to demonstrate his adherence to his declared democratic
values by supporting the request for the prohibition of the Jehovah's
Witnesses. In this case his reputation remained unsullied since the court
denied the request.
Now
the prosecutor has asked for admission to the case of Alexander Dvorkin as
a representative of the Russian Orthodox church, and, citing the National
Security Doctrine, she declared that the Jehovah's Witnesses represent a
threat to it (security) since they are not a part of "our"
multiconfessional society.
But
like before, again now the prosecutor cannot point to specific instances
of violations or explain just whose specific rights and freedoms have been
violated and which specific individual has been subjected to harm. But at
the same time she states that she is defending the interests of all
Christians as well as the believers of the congregation since their rights
are being violated by the organization. It is beside the point that the
Jehovah's Witnesses have asked to deliver them from such
"protection," but in four years the prosecutor has not gotten
around to acquainting herself more closely with them by attending a
meeting or at least inviting them to her office at the procuracy for
explanations. All of her citations of doctrinal literature cannot
constitute evidence of actions and they bear witness simply to her
intention to abandon the legal field and use the court as a kind of
doctrinal tribune.
What
are the accusations that are brought against the Jehovah's Witnesses?
Kindling
religious strife. In three years of investigation of the criminal case the
prosecutor did not find a single specific instance. In the civil case it
was shown that the Jehovah's Witnesses' conviction that their religion is
the only true one and their doctrinal critique of other confessions are
sufficient evidence of kindling strife. In this regard the prosecutor
spoke passionately about how the Witnesses appeal to the concept of the
"Great Babylon," and talk of how "I do not bring peace but
a sword" or "they will separate the sheep from the goats."
There is no need to explain to readers of NG-religii that these were not
made up by the Witnesses. But is this a matter for judicial investigation
and should Orthodox believers be taken to court because they consider that
"only their faith is the true faith and all others are devices of the
devil and human pride" (quote from the Orthodox catechism)?
Coercion
to break down the family. The prosecutor found in Jehovah's Witnesses'
literature terrible quotations, including "whoever leaves father and
mother and follows me will inherit the kingdom of heaven." There it
is--"sure proof." Not a single case of "coercion" to
break up a marriage, nor a single family that was broken up on this basis,
nor any statement from the prosecutor of the deprivation of parental
rights on the basis of believers harming their children was introduced.
Yet
another of the prosecutor's arguments. It is necessary to celebrate state
and religious holidays together; this draws a family together and,
besides, these days are designated in the constitution as nonworking days.
The Witnesses' rejection of holidays breaks up the family. But why they
should celebrate Orthodox Christmas when they hold different religious
convictions the prosecutor was not able to explain. To be sure, I, like
all citizens who read or even do not read the law, suggested that this is
a personal matter whether to go to a May Day parade or to church on
Christmas, or to spend these days in some other way in accordance with
one's personal choice.
Inducement
to suicide. What is in view is the refusal of blood transfusion. But
according to law any one of us has the right to choose forms of treatment.
Jehovah's Witnesses do not reject medical intervention, but they wish, in
cases of necessity, to use alternatives to blood transfusion, particularly
blood substitutes. They have even set up a special committee for relations
with hospitals in order to have the opportunity to provide information
about other methods of treatment and to provide blood substitutes for each
patient needing them. If the prosecutor is so concerned about the health
of Russian citizens, wouldn't it be better to think about those who are
infected with AIDS, viral hepatitis, and other infections by means of
blood transfusions?
Infringement
of the person, rights, and freedoms of citizens. The prosecutor finds this
in the religious life of the Jehovah's Witnesses as such--they devote a
great deal of time to preaching, meetings, reading the Bible and religious
literature, and they sometimes express a desire to serve and they do serve
in their distinctive monastery, Bethel, outside St. Petersburg. But if one
is truly a believer that means reading the Bible and spreading one's
faith, and preaching, and speaking about one's faith. Only the believers
themselves can determine how much time to devote to this.
The
prosecutor is not acquainted with either the structure of the organization
or its believers, although she laments that Jehovah's Witnesses actively
preach, and somehow this violates their rights. Then what about the high
respect for the religious heroes of Orthodoxy who devoted all their life
to this (preaching and spiritual exhortation)? Why does the prosecutor not
bring a representation to the court requesting the liquidation of Orthodox
monasteries, where people renounce their families and the world and spend
twenty-four hours a day in the service of God as they understand it? Why
doesn't the prosecutor, who insists on an eight-hour working day in
accordance with the law on labor, know that labor legislation does not
apply to monastery work, preaching, or prayer.
Enticement
of teenagers and minor children into the organization's activity.
Patriarch Alexis served in the church from six years of age. I was
baptized as an infant in the Orthodox faith and I thank my grandmother for
this. Even in the soviet period this was possible both for the person who
subsequently was to head the Russian Orthodox church and for a sinful
attorney. Why, at a time of the formal declaration of democratic values,
does a representative of the state deny Jehovah's Witnesses the
opportunity to educate their children in their faith?
Let's
turn from accusations to evidence. Appeals to doctrinal literature
unsparingly sprinkled with quotes from the Bible and the conclusions of
experts. The prosecutor maintains that Witnesses interpret the Bible
incorrectly and requests a total ban on their literature. But who told our
Russian (or even soviet) prosecutor how the Bible should be interpreted?
And how far have we come from those times when literature was confiscated
and destroyed?
Take
the experts. The well known author of the theory of "sectomania,"
Professor Fedor Kondratiev. In the previous court session he was caught in
blatant plagiarism--of the seven pages of his pseudoscientific conclusion
that the Jehovah's Witnesses doctrine can be called mass psychosis, he
copied verbatim from the notorious handbook of the Moscow patriarchate of
1997, without omitting a single comma. The prosecutor again summoned him
to this trial in the capacity of a specialist.
Or
religion scholar Igor Metlik. After long explanations in the previous
trial about the "sharply antichurch position of the Jehovah's
Witnesses at the time when Russian society is turning to the values of
Orthodox Christianity," he was not able to answer the attorney's
question about the meaning of the name "Jesus;" this is
reflected in the transcript of the trial. And the prosecutor summoned him
in the capacity of a specialist. As proofs of the dangers of the
congregation were presented publicistic materials of the State Duma,
opinions of famous anticultists Alexander Dvorkin and Fr Oleg Steniaev,
conclusions of religion scholars and psychiatrists who called the
Witnesses' doctrine "pseudo-Christian," and parents who
disapproved of the religious choice of their children and advocated
"deprogramming."
This
is all extremely regrettable. And the issue is not just the wretchedness
of the legal conclusions of the prosecutor. These have occurred before and
not just in our history. Jehovah's Witnesses "undermine the
foundations of national unity;" that is from Hitler's decree banning
them on 28 February 1933. Jehovah's Witnesses "do not participate in
elections and holidays of the German people;" an excerpt from a
specific sentence where the punishment was concentration camp. The purple
triangle on a prisoner's chest distinguished him just like the yellow
star, and Jehovah's Witnesses were the only officially recognized
prisoners of conscience of fascism.
Now
the prosecutor denies Jehovah's Witnesses the right to be a part of the
Russian multiconfessional society in light of the National Security
Doctrine. Just like it was when they, like many other soviet people, were
driven in groups to Siberia, placed in camps and prisons, and deprived of
their children "for enticement," which even now in the
prosecutor's opinion is a basis for banning the activity of the Jehovah's
Witnesses. Here is an excerpt from a specific sentence: "When they
become members of the Jehovists' organization, workers are placed in the
position of being unable to realize and fulfil their civic duties before
socialist society. All members of the sect are not members of a labor
union and their children are not members of komsomol and pioneer
organizations. Members of the sect do not attend movies or clubs, and they
do not subscribe to periodical literature, whereby they isolate themselves
from all cultural influence." The day of the beginning of the trial
was exactly ten years after the Russian president's decree acknowledging
that Jehovah's Witnesses had been victims of political repression. But the
prosecutor was not troubled by the coincidence of the accusations. To be
sure, the time is milder, as are the sanctions. Prohibiting activity and
literature and liquidating the congregation are really not the same as
exiling and shooting.
I
consider that this trial is dangerous for all of society as a whole
because the individual is being reduced to the lowest common denominator
by means of force. Jehovah's Witnesses constitute a large organization and
they attract public attention. But that is not the point. The point is the
state-imposed unanimity of thought and unity of faith within our
traditions. (tr. by PDS, posted 7 December 2001)
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