Sunday, December 29, 2013

So Goes People of Faith… So Goes the Nation

I'm really enjoying my new job, which involves research on various topics, but I realize how mis-informed and easily manipulated I've been about a lot things during my lifetime. One of my recent topics has been communism, specifically in the Soviet Union. I try to find websites that present an accurate view, but I've also found a number of websites that continue to espouse that a communist society is the best way for people to live. Some parts sound noble: the classless society; everyone is taken care of with a job and pension and place to live; free healthcare and education. Property and businesses belong to everyone. Sounds good, right? But history paints another story, much of which has been hidden under layers of misinformation and eliminating anyone who might tell the truth.

In studying Lenin and Stalin, I recognized an intellectual arrogance among them. They thought they knew what was best for everyone, but then they had to use tools such as lies and propaganda, ruthless secret police, mass executions, fear, and complete and total control to get the populace in line with their philosophy of life. Have you ever heard of the Gulags? We've all heard of the Nazi concentration camps during World War II and are glad they were closed down, but Soviet Russia used hundreds of forced labor camps to control their people for MANY more years. No one knows exactly how many people Stalin killed; I've seen estimates of 7,000,000 up to 20,000,000, and many of them people of faith.

I found testimonies of people who miss the communist way of life. They felt secure when someone else made all the decisions for them and guaranteed them a job and pension when they got old. They didn't like the insecurity of a republic or a democratic society where the individual had to think and make decisions for themselves. One website, a blogger, said that he'd met people living under communist rule that said their life was just fine. The blogger also seems to think he could continue to express himself freely, study religion, and live however he wants in a communist society.

I also found testimonies of people who suffered tremendously under Stalin's communist rule: practicing Jews, the Christians, creative artists and writers, free-thinkers, land-owners, and more. Nikolai Getman spent seven years in a Gulag just for sitting with some artist friends in a cafe when one of them drew a caricature of Stalin on a cigarette paper. In the year of terror 1937-38, 85% of the 35,000 clergy were arrested; an average of 1,000 people were executed each day during 'the Great Purge' to keep Stalin in power. Why were churches targeted? Did people of faith represent the conscience and consciousness of the nation?

Atheism was the only accepted belief in Soviet Russia. Not in the beginning; in the beginning people were told they could keep their religious beliefs. But it didn't take long for the those in power to start persecuting the churches and people of faith. Again, the arrogance of the atheists in power thought their way was the only way; that an intelligent man would not stoop to believe in the mythological hearsay of a creator god who seeks to have a relationship with puny man. No, man was/is at the top of the totem pole. If man wants to be saved, he must do it himself. And the intellectuals will guide the ignorant, with force and lies, if need be. And that's what it took for communism to work.

I see a disturbing parallel today on all fronts. And too many have already become comfortable with the mindset that a socialist system is the fairest; that the intellectuals in power know what's best for us; that the government taking care of us is the least complicated way of life. And with all of that comes the loss of personal freedom and responsibility.

But take care to watch what's happening to the people of faith. They're slowly being silenced, if not penalized, for expressing or attempting to live out their beliefs. And the culture is being manipulated to stand against them. Rise and shine in love, people of faith, before we lose it all.

2 comments:

  1. Very perceptive observations, Donna. I'm glad you didn't get suckered in by all the misinformation heralded by so-called news sources. Did you run across articles or information from a Pulitzer prize-winning reporter named Walter Duranty during your research? He wrote for the New York Times in the 20's and 30's, I believe, and wrote many blatantly false articles on the virtues of Communism and Stalin that were heralded as proof by the elites that we should also embrace Communism in America. Did you run across the term "Useful Idiots" and identify the person who originated the term? We've got plenty of them to this day. This is a wonderful post. I pray for America; we need it.

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    1. I didn't see Duranty's articles, but I'll definitely look them up. It's so easy to manipulate the general public, even in this amazing age of information, because people don't want to take the time to check something out. We tend to believe what we want to believe (rampant ear-tickling) and base truth on hearsay. And the Pulitzer and Nobel prizes are becoming less and less impressive to me, based on some of their choices through the years, and especially recently. Thanks for commenting!

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