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123 lines
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123 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
Kremlin sponsors `New Age' kookery
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by Mark Burdman
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On Oct. 11, the Soviet Foreign Ministry sponsored a most unusual press
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conference. With Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennadi Gerasimov standing by his
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side, Soviet mystic and faith healer Anatoly Kashpirovsky boasted to
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journalists about the success of his activities. ``They idolize me,'' he said
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of the Soviet people. ``I can reverse what was thought irreversible. I tap the
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inner resources of the body.''
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The next day, Radio Moscow's English-language broadcast lauded
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Kashpirovsky's ``psycho-therapeutic'' techniques, saying that Kashpirovsky's
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show on Soviet television was watched by 200 million viewers, and that he had
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``cured many of them.'' He would now be turning his bio-energies to curing
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AIDS, said Radio Moscow.
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On Oct. 12, the London <Daily Telegraph'>s Moscow correspondent commented
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that Kashpirovsky has become a ``Soviet superstar, the talk of the land. When
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his television show is on, the streets are deserted.... As faith healer,
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hypnotist, national comforter and healer of the sick, he has millions hanging
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on his words.''
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Kashpirovsky is not the only popular occult game in town. Hundreds of
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thousands of Soviets, every morning, watch ``healing energy'' personality Alan
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Chumak on television. He has been called a ``Good Samaritan version of the
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czarist mystic Rasputin.'' Chumak claims miracle cures for the multiple crises
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now facing the U.S.S.R. For example, on the devastating food shortage, he
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asserts: ``Vast amounts of our farm produce just rots before it can get to the
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stores. Now we're doing an experiment to see if I can radiate the energy that
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will be a preservative and help store fruits and vegetables.''
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The Soviet government daily <Izvestia> recently reported that ``practically
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every city now has its popular extrasensory healer.... <Glasnost,> miserable
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medical care, and a certain naive belief in extrasensory powers have led to
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their remarkable success in the Soviet Union.''
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The sudden obsession, both in the official media and in the population at
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large, with phenomena ranging from UFOs to the Abominable Snowman (``Yeti''),
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has begun to receive attention in the West. Britain's <Sunday Correspondent>
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reported Oct. 15, under the headline, ``Mother Russia Loses Her Marbles,''
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that ``regular visitors to Russia believe the country is becoming more
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unhinged.'' The paper quotes a woman watching the vast queues for every
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imaginable consumer good: ``Only aliens from outer space can save us now.''
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Noting that ``the whole edifice'' of the Marxist belief structure of previous
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regimes has been destroyed under Gorbachov, the paper adds: ``Pre-
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revolutionary Russia was famed for its mystics and faith-healers. The most
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notorious, the Siberian monk Rasputin, thrived at a similar time of
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turbulence, in the last years of Czardom.''
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- A Russian Nazi movement? -
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But such commentaries do not come to grips with <why> the Soviet elites are
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so blatantly sponsoring occultism, mysticism, and irrationalism. In part, this
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is an empire's classic reflex in a time of crisis, to provide a combination of
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cults and ``bread and circus'' forms of bizarre entertainment, to distract the
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masses from the misery of their lives. But the cultural engineers ultimately
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behind this occultism are thinking of something more ambitious and far more
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dangerous. They are creating the basis for a mass fascist transformation in
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the U.S.S.R., in the same sense that the proliferation of paganism, Satanism,
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and occultism in Germany was an essential part in forming the committed Nazi
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cadre. The greater danger in the Soviet case, is that the transformations
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occur in a Russian culture that is far more irrational to begin with, than was
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German culture earlier in this century.
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Also, the relevant Russian elites believe that by doing this, and having it
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adequately publicized in the West, they will reinforce ``New Age'' movements
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globally. This has the aim of destroying the values of Western Judeo-Christian
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civilization. But beyond this, today's cultural managers, like the mystical
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Tibetan-born millionaire Badmayev and the creators of movements like Madame
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Blavatsky's theosophy in the 19th century, claim that the ``Russian soul'' is
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uniquely attuned to the values associated with the ``Age of Aquarius,'' and
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that, therefore, Great Mother Russia will ultimately rule a world driven
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crazy. This belief in the superiority of the ``Russian soul'' is fully shared
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by Western leaders in such cult movements as anthroposophy and theosophy.
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- Applause from Lucifer -
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It is no accident that the ``spiritualist'' transformations in the U.S.S.R.
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are enthusiastically welcomed by the London-based Lucis (originally Lucifer)
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Trust. During an Oct. 12 discussion, a Lucis official expressed hope that
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mystical ideas could fill a vacuum in the country, as the popular faith in the
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Communist system collapses. The Lucis official said the mystical paintings of
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the late Nicholas Roerich and the writings of Roerich and his wife from
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earlier in this century, could form a good basis for this kind of spiritual
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renewal. She reported that Mikhail Gorbachov recently was quoted in an
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interview in the Soviet press, praising Roerich.
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One Roerich follower now touring Britain, Russian-born Barbara Ivanowa, has
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reportedly been a student and disciple of Lucis founder Alice Bailey, she
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said. Ivanowa will be a featured participant at an Oct. 21-22 conference on
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parapsychology in London (see last week's <EIR>). She is one of the leaders of
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a ``Madame Blavatsky revival'' in the U.S.S.R. Blavatsky's theosophy, like
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Roerich's ideas, are used as a bridge between the ``Aquarian'' movements of
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East and West, but with the effect of proliferating Russian mysticism in the
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West.
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In mid-October, the U.S.S.R.'s Association of Peace Through Culture
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sponsored an international conference honoring Roerich. Delegates from India,
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Mexico, Bulgaria, France, the United States, and other countries were in
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attendance. The meeting received favorable coverage on Radio Moscow.
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Meanwhile, preparations are being geared up for a major Soviet patronized
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East-West Gnostic extravaganza during the first weeks of 1990. On Jan. 14-20,
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a thousand people--700 from the Soviet Union and 300 from the West--will be
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attending the second Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders for
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Human Survival, taking place in Moscow, on the theme ``Environment and
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Development for Survival.'' The four-man coordinating committee for the Global
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Forum includes Peru's former Finance Minister Manuel Ulloa and Rev. James Park
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Morton from the St. John the Divine Cathedral cult center in New York City.
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Official co-sponsors on the Soviet side include the Supreme Soviet, the Soviet
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Academy of Sciences, and the Interfaith Foundation for the Survival and
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Development of Humanity.
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One example of the official Moscow sponsorship of the New Age, should give
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some insight into the brutality and cynicism underlying the Soviet
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government's ``Operation Occult.'' The Oct. 12 <Daily Telegraph> of London
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wrote that, ``in an extraordinary demonstration of its new-found faith in
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transcendental meditation, the Soviet Union has asked 1,000 followers of the
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Maharishi [Mahesh Yogi] to set up a futuristic domed settlement on the site of
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an Armenian city devastated by last year's earthquake. The Maharishi Ayar-Ved
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Foundation, named after the giggling guru who owns Mentmore, Bedfordshire,
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former home of the Earls of Rosebery, set up a clinic in Moscow earlier this
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year to teach Russian meditation techniques. Now, with the backing of the
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U.S.S.R. Ministry of Culture, a vast Maharishi delegation will travel to
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Leninakan, Armenia's second largest city, to teach techniques which the
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foundation claims will `create coherence and stability throughout Armenia.'|''
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The same day that this article appeared, the
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international media were filled with reports of Soviet Army cadets shooting at
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Armenians in the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenians are being
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starved out by a road blockade from Azerbaijan, which the Soviet authorities
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have refused to break. Obviously, this is a source of amusement for the
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``giggling gurus'' at the Ministry of Culture in Moscow.
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