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Russian Orthodox patriarch blasts teaching Darwin in schools Print E-mail
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Written by RIA Novosti   
Tuesday, 20 February 2007

apes.jpg Moscow, January 29 (RIA Novosti ) - Imposing on schoolchildren the theory that humans descended from apes is unacceptable, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church said Monday.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the church has campaigned for the right to teach the basics of the Orthodox faith in public schools as a challenge to Darwin's theory of evolution, which was official dogma in Soviet times.

The issue has had particular resonance after schoolgirl Mariya Shraiber and her father filed a lawsuit demanding that Darwinism be stripped of its dominant position in the Russian school curriculum, calling its teaching to the exclusion of other theories a gross violation of the freedom of choice.

"Teaching the biblical theory of the world's creation will not harm students. If people choose to believe that they descended from apes, let them, but without imposing their opinions on others," Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia told an educational conference in the Kremlin, which was attended by government and military officials, public and cultural figures and spiritual leaders from Russia and former Soviet republics.

Alexy II said it was important not only to respect the rights of minorities, but those of the Orthodox majority as well, whose share the Church put at 90% of the total population throughout Russia, and whose children "should know the basics of their religion."

"If introduced, the subject will not be in breach of the principle of secularism fixed in the Constitution," he said, adding that teaching the basics of Orthodoxy would prevent the ideas of nationalism and extremism from taking root at school.

The calls by Orthodox leaders for a course on the history of Christianity, whether optional or mandatory, to be included in school curriculums has met with opposition from leaders of other faiths practiced in Russia, who say a course on the history of all religions should be introduced.

Advocates of a secular society have protested the introduction of such a course in schools at all, saying that even if students were interested and it was introduced, it would have to be taught by secular professors and be optional rather than mandatory.




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1. Background
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , on 22-02-2007 17:33
I think it is important to understand the background. The whole thing does not mean that creationism (as it is understood in some conservative Christian circles) is the official position of the Orthodox Church in Russia. When you read what the Church Fathers say about the creation of the world, there is very little doubt what their central point is like. The most important thing to remember is that man is created in the image of God, no matter what stages the process of creation might include.  
 
I thnik that the current situation is, on the one hand, a reaction agianst the soviet 'dogma' everyone had been previously forced to believe. 
 
On the other, it is connected with the question of religious education in public schools, which is now being discussed in the Russian Federation. There is a strong opposition against the confessional teaching of Orthodoxy/Islam/Judaism at school expressed by high-ranking state officials, and the so-called 'traditional confessions' of Russia try to convince the government that the idea is not that bad.  
 
The funny thing is that at the same time the extreme atheistic views are still present in all school textbooks on biology etc. 
 
But religious education as such in Russia is a broader question, which I plan to pay attention to later in a larger article.

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 20 February 2007 )
 
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