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<text id=89TT3160>
<link 90TT2737>
<title>
Dec. 04, 1989: Cross Meets Kremlin
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 04, 1989 Women Face The '90s
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RELIGION, Page 74
Cross Meets Kremlin
</hdr><body>
<p>Gorbachev's historic visit to Pope John Paul II seals a truce
after 72 years of bitter spiritual warfare
</p>
<p>By Richard N. Ostling
</p>
<p> Of all the events that have shaken the Soviet bloc in 1989,
none is more fraught with history -- or more implausible --
than the polite encounter that will take place this week in
Vatican City. There, in the spacious ceremonial library of the
16th century Apostolic Palace, the czar of world atheism,
Mikhail Gorbachev, will visit the Vicar of Christ, Pope John
Paul II. Before delivering formal speeches in the presence of
their entourages, the two East Europeans will sit down alone to
chat in Russian without interpreters.
</p>
<p> The moment will be electric, and not only because John Paul
helped inflame the fervor for freedom in his Polish homeland
that has swept like brush fire across Eastern Europe. Beyond
that, the meeting of the two men symbolizes the end of the 20th
century's most dramatic spiritual war, a conflict in which the
seemingly irresistible force of Communism battered against the
immovable object of Christianity.
</p>
<p> Until recently, the battalions of Marxism seemed to have
the upper hand over the soldiers of the Cross. In the wake of
the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Lenin had pledged toleration
but delivered terror. "Russia turned crimson with the blood of
martyrs," says Father Gleb Yakunin, Russian Orthodoxy's bravest
agitator for religious freedom. In the Bolsheviks' first five
years in power, 28 bishops and 1,200 priests were cut down by
the red sickle. Stalin greatly accelerated the terror, and by
the end of Khrushchev's rule, liquidations of clergy reached an
estimated 50,000. After World War II, fierce but generally less
bloody persecution spread into the Ukraine and the new Soviet
bloc, affecting millions of Roman Catholics and Protestants as
well as Orthodox.
</p>
<p> The violence did not cease with Stalin's death in 1953. In
1981 Pope John Paul barely escaped assassination. It is believed
in the highest circles of the Vatican that Gorbachev's Kremlin
predecessors were the masterminds, though the Soviets deny
this. The reason for the attack, claims a ranking official of
the Holy See, was that the Polish Pope refused to accept the
division of Europe into East and West. "The East bloc," says
this official, "realized he was a destabilizing factor."
</p>
<p> That he was. While Gorbachev's hands-off policy was the
immediate cause of the chain reaction of liberation that has
swept through Eastern Europe in the past few months, John Paul
deserves much of the longer-range credit. His triumphant tour
of Poland in 1979, says a Polish bishop, altered the "mentality
of fear, the fear of police and tanks, of losing your job, of
not getting promoted, of being thrown out of school, of failing
to get a passport. People learned that if they ceased to fear
the system, the system was helpless." Thus was born Solidarity,
backed by the church and led by such friends of the Pope as Lech
Walesa and Tadeusz Mazowiecki, who subsequently became the
Soviet bloc's first Christian Prime Minister.
</p>
<p> But the Pope's vision stretched far beyond Poland. Just
before he ascended the throne of Peter in 1978, Karol Wojtyla
had confided to some German bishops an astonishing prediction
of European Communism's inevitable demise. As an ideology, said
the onetime philosophy professor, Communism had nothing more to
say and stood for nothing except the perpetuation of power. As
an economic system, it had failed utterly. During the Pope's
1979 visit to Orthodoxy's Ecumenical Patriarch in Turkey, a
papal adviser told TIME's Wilton Wynn that John Paul urgently
hoped to bring Rome and the Eastern Orthodox Church together.
Reason: the Pope was convinced that Communism faced inevitable
collapse and that Soviet bloc nations would turn to Christianity
to fill the void.
</p>
<p> Though talk of Communism's collapse seemed like wishful
thinking at that time, John Paul based his uncanny prediction
on a keen sense of moral and historical dynamics, and also on
personal experience. Unlike other leaders in the West, he knew
what it was like to live under a Marxist regime day by day.
Through the 1980s his speeches hammered home the concept of a
Europe reunited from the Atlantic to the Urals and inspired by
Christian faith. John Paul marked 1988's millennium of Ukrainian
and Russian Christendom by evoking Europeans' "desire that
barriers should be broken down."
</p>
<p> If those barriers have really begun to topple, it is
largely owing to the political reforms Gorbachev has inspired
throughout the East bloc. In the process, the Soviet leader has
let Christians start rebuilding their devastated institutions.
Gorbachev is not motivated by religious belief, though he was
baptized into Orthodoxy by his grandparents, and his mother
remains a faithful churchgoer. His aims are temporal and
pragmatic: he hopes to harness the force of Christianity in the
fight against his country's moral decay, seen in growing drug
abuse, alcoholism, suicide, sloth and a 50% divorce rate. Says
Russian Orthodoxy's Metropolitan Pitirim: "Everyone has realized
that failures in the economy and politics are a result of
ethical violations. We want a renewed sense of spiritual
values."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev has also grasped the fact that political and
economic survival depends upon the goodwill of the Soviet
people, among whom Christians have always far outnumbered
Communists. Gorbachev, moreover, needs the cooperation of the
West, observes Father Mark, a reform-minded Orthodox priest in
Moscow, who considers Gorbachev's program within the U.S.S.R.
"a result of foreign policy necessity." More than any of the 18
summit meetings between Soviet leaders and U.S. Presidents,
Gorbachev's pilgrimage to the papal library will make his nation
a respectable participant in world discourse.
</p>
<p> The road to this week's Vatican meeting was paved by 212
decades of subtle diplomatic maneuvers. Beginning with John
XXIII's papacy and the Second Vatican Council, the Vatican's
master diplomat, Agostino Casaroli, pursued church Ostpolitik
that sought openings in Eastern Europe in return for a more
conciliatory stance toward Communism. But neither that strategy
nor John Paul II's more hard-nosed approach achieved much before
Gorbachev took power.
</p>
<p> The big breakthrough came when the Pope boldly dispatched
Casaroli, by now Vatican Secretary of State, and seven other
Cardinals to Moscow last year to celebrate the Christian
millennium. Casaroli managed a 90-minute meeting with Gorbachev
and handed him a three-page letter plus a memo from John Paul
listing complaints about treatment of Catholics. Gorbachev
responded directly to several of the Pope's requests. Last year
Lithuania's two leading bishops were returned to head dioceses
after a combined 53 years of internal exile, and the cathedral
in Vilnius, previously used as an art museum, was restored for
worship. This year the Belorussian republic got its first bishop
in 63 years. That paved the way for Archbishop Angelo Sodano,
who oversees the Vatican's foreign relations, to make the
arrangements for Gorbachev's historic visit to the Holy See.
</p>
<p> These concessions to Catholicism are only part of
Gorbachev's religious liberalization. Television is broadcasting
worship services, and religious art is openly displayed. Last
month the Orthodox Eucharist was celebrated in the 15th century
Assumption Cathedral, inside the Kremlin, for the first time
since 1918.
</p>
<p> Most important, 3,000 new churches have opened in the past
nine months. However, Russian Orthodoxy's current 10,000
churches are a far cry from the 18,000 that existed when Stalin
died, and just a fraction of the 54,000 before the Bolshevik
Revolution. Ever since World War II, when Stalin fostered a
revival of Orthodoxy in order to enlist its support in the war
effort, the Kremlin's policy has been not to liquidate the
church but to infiltrate and control it. For that reason, the
Soviet regime has always preferred docile Russian-led Orthodox
and Protestant churches to Catholicism, which is more
independent and led by a feisty Pope in Rome.
</p>
<p> But the battle for religious freedom is not yet won. The
Supreme Soviet has still not taken up a long-anticipated
revision of the repressive religious statute instituted by
Stalin in 1929. There is no certainty whether, or when,
parliament will scrap the hated law, which subjects all church
activities to Communist control and forbids parish education.
Nor, given the history of the U.S.S.R., is there certainty that
rights proclaimed in speeches and laws will be honored by
bureaucrats.
</p>
<p> Many of the gains made by the Soviet Union's 70 million
Christians have also been enjoyed by the estimated 74 million
Christians who live in the six satellite nations. Poland's
Communists "have realized that unleashing conflict with the
church has been a mistake throughout the past 45 years," says
Alojzy Orszulik, the Polish bishops' spokesman. The nation,
which remains 95% Catholic, this year became the first in the
Soviet bloc to enact a law restoring all basic rights to the
churches. Diplomatic relations with the Holy See were
established in July. Hungary, also rapidly liberalizing, is 60%
Catholic and has sizable Lutheran and Reformed churches. The
regime is rewriting the religious-control laws, has abolished
the repressive state Office for Church Affairs and, after talks
last week at the Vatican, has indicated that diplomatic
relations will be re-established. The Pope is due to visit
Hungary in 1991.
</p>
<p> The surging crowds that toppled Czechoslovakia's rulers
last week were inspired by, among others, Frantisek Cardinal
Tomasek, 90, who has become an increasingly militant proponent
of change. The ousted Jakes regime, which had permitted the
appointment of six new Catholic bishops, only two weeks ago
concluded a round of talks at the Vatican. In East Germany, the
bloc's only predominantly Protestant state, this year's
pro-democracy movement emerged from small church gatherings
that, through the 1980s, criticized the Communists' handling of
foreign policy, disarmament and the environment. A bishops'
statement read from every pulpit Sept. 10 detailed "long
overdue" changes. Most of the mass rallies and marches since
then have gathered at Protestant churches.
</p>
<p> As in the U.S.S.R., the dominant Orthodox Church has been
subservient to the regimes in both Bulgaria and Rumania,
remaining mute when the leaderships closed churches and
repressed clergy. Rumania's huge Eastern Rite Catholic community
has forcibly lived underground since 1948.
</p>
<p> The most contentious religious problem within the Soviet
Union concerns the 4 million or so Catholics in the western
Ukraine, whose plight is a key agenda item in this week's talks
between Gorbachev and the Pope. Friendlier contacts, and a papal
visit to the U.S.S.R., cannot occur unless this, the world's
largest underground religious community, is restored. Under
Stalin, all Ukrainian Catholic bishops were imprisoned and a
fraudulent 1946 synod dissolved their jurisdictions, handing
over 4,100 churches to Russian Orthodoxy. The majority of the
Catholic priests rejected the takeover and either were arrested
or went into hiding.
</p>
<p> Decades later, ten bishops and an unknown number of priests
are still functioning. "They deny us the right to praise our
God openly," says Catholicism's Metropolitan Vladimir, 83, who
faithfully celebrates clandestine Masses daily on a makeshift
altar in his tiny Lvov apartment. Last September more than
100,000 demonstrators wound their way through Lvov to the St.
Yuri Cathedral, one of the former Catholic churches currently
operated by the Orthodox. Subsequently, Ukrainians in Lvov and
elsewhere have retaken control of some Orthodox church
buildings.
</p>
<p> Rebirth of the Ukrainian churches may stir the sort of
nationalist fervor that is inextricably linked with religion.
Along with economic failure, this unrest poses the gravest of
threats to Gorbachev's regime. Yet Gorbachev apparently
calculates that the movement will be safer aboveground and in
contact with a Pope who preaches against political violence. The
major reason that Gorbachev has not done more for the Ukrainian
Catholics has been pressure from the Russian Orthodoxy, which
stands to lose half its flock in some regions.
</p>
<p> Once the Ukrainian problem is resolved, assuming the
Gorbachev-inspired liberalization continues, the Roman Pontiff
can pursue his overarching vision of reunion with the whole of
Eastern Orthodoxy. The churches of the East and West are like
"two lungs of a single body," John Paul is fond of saying.
Religious negotiations have made surprisingly brisk progress on
the ecclesiastical and theological bases for union.
</p>
<p> Until very recently, the Russian Orthodox Church would
probably have vetoed reunification under pressure from the
Kremlin. Now, with the Communists less inclined to interfere,
the idea of unity seems more feasible. The main Orthodox fear,
observes one Vatican official, is that "we are too powerful and
centralized." But in the end, he speculates, the authority of
the papacy will not be an "insurmountable problem." According
to this analysis, "the church could revert to the 1st millennium
model, a communion of churches with greater autonomy," instead
of the centralized church structure of the past 1,000 years.
That is an astonishing scenario coming from a high-ranking
official of the Holy See.
</p>
<p> The second aspect of the Pope's vision, a revival of
Christianity as Marxism recedes, is as problematic as the goal
of church reunion. But John Paul is not the only person to
foresee such a momentous development. Alexander Ogorodnikov, the
Orthodox dissident whose Christian Democratic Union was the
first non-Communist political party to request official
recognition, predicts a "second Christianization" of Russia.
</p>
<p> Father Franc Rode of the Vatican's Council for Dialogue
with Non-Believers says Westerners can barely comprehend the
"horrible spiritual desert" that resulted when the Bolsheviks
turned atheism into a political ideology, attempting to expunge
God from the human soul. "This entire experiment," he asserts,
"is now proving to have been a dismal failure, one of the most
horrible in man's history." If that experiment is in fact
nearing its end, then much of the credit can be claimed by two
improbable allies: Mikhail Gorbachev and John Paul II.
</p>
<p>--Ann Blackman/Moscow, Cathy Booth/Rome and Angela
Leuker/Vienna
</p>
</body></article>
</text>