ACADEMIC JOURNAL
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ISSN 2542-1077 (Print) ISSN 1994-5973 (Online) |
Russian history |
Ruzhinskaya Irina N. | Petrozavodsk State University |
Keywords: authorized representative Council for the Russian Orthodox Church Affairs Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic prosopography official personality accentuation |
Summary: The article discusses the activities of Viktor Ivanovich Klishko as the commissioner of the Council for the Russian Orthodox Church
Affairs in Karelia in 1950. The research documents are represented by unpublished sources of the National Archive of the Republic
of Karelia. V. I. Klishko’s personal archive file, stored in the National Archive, is a particularly valuable source of information. The
research methodology is a set of approaches – a combination of prosopographic, historical, psychological, and qualitological approaches
in the context of modal biography. This approach enables to minimize the research subjectivism in assessing the ideological
and behavioral dominants of the Council’s commissioner as an actor in history. It was established that the appointment of Victor
Klishko to the post of the commissioner of the Council for the Russian Orthodox Church Affairs was facilitated by a set of factors:
the vector of the Church-state policy at the central and regional levels, as well as Victor Klishko’s professional and managerial experience.
The author concludes that as the commissioner Victor Klishko achieved significant results in transferring churches to state
control according to the cultural and social needs of the population of Karelia during his six months in office. A clear strategy of Victor
Klishko’s management activities enabled to expand the scope of activities of the commissioner in the field of negative campaigning.
Following his personal highlights and accents, as well as many years of anti-religious experience, the commissioner supported
repressive measures against the Church. These measures were tested by Klishko in practicing “militant atheism” during the 1920s
and the 1930s. Victor Klishko’s transfer from the commissioner’s post was the result of the opposition between the Council for the
Russian Orthodox Church Affairs and the Department for Agitation and Propaganda of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, as well as the lack of corporate communication and polylogue with the objects of Church-state relations. |
Displays: 285; |