Russia & FSU

Russian security chief apologizes for aide’s Jewish ‘cult’ comments

Russia’s chief rabbi has rejected as “anti-Semitic delirium” claims made by Aleksey Pavlov about a specific branch of the religionRussian security chief apologizes for aide’s Jewish ‘cult’ comments

Russian security chief apologizes for aide’s Jewish ‘cult’ comments

Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation Nikolai Patrushev. ©  Sputnik/Grigory Sysoev

Nikolay Patrushev, the secretary of the Russian national security council, has issued an apology, distancing the body from “untruthful remarks” about a Jewish group, which his aide made in a recent opinion piece. The Russian Jewish community was outraged by the article.

The claims made by Aleksey Pavlov were his personal viewpoint that did not reflect in any way the position of the Russian government, Patrushev stressed in a statement to the Argumenty i Fakty (AiF) newspaper, which was published on Thursday. “Relevant action has been taken regarding the author,” he added.

The top official was referring to an opinion piece by his assistant, which the paper printed on Tuesday. He argued that Ukraine was being deliberately dragged towards various forms of paganism or cultism masquerading as mainstream religions, accusing some senior Ukrainian public figures of directing the process.

Among the targets of his verbal attack was Chabad-Lubavitch, a variant of Hasidic Judaism that originated over two centuries ago in what is now Vitebsk Region in Belarus, but was largely pushed out of the Soviet Union during the Bolshevik crackdown on religious practices.

Pavlov called the movement a “sect,” which in Russian has a pejorative meaning similar to the word “cult” in English, and claimed that its “main principle is the superiority of its members over all other nations and peoples.”

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The characterization was strongly rejected by Russia’s chief rabbi, Berel Lazar, whose rebuke was published by AiF on Wednesday.

“It should be enough to say that 90% of rabbis working in Russian Jewish communities are part of Chabad, and I am one of them,” he wrote.

The movement rejects any form of idolatry, contrary to “Mr. Pavlov’s fantasies” and advocates respect for all monotheistic religions, all peoples, and every individual since we are “all in essence G-d’s children,” he added.

Lazar said he would have ignored Pavlov’s words as “vulgar anti-Semitic delirium” if he didn’t hold a high position in the Russian security council. He called for a “swift and unequivocal reaction” to it.

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