The newspaper
Bezbozhnik (Godless, Atheist) (1922–1941), founded and edited by
Yemelyan Yaroslavsky,
Bezbozhnik appeared first in December 1922, and the following year a Moscow monthly for industrial workers
Bezbozhnik u Stanka (The Godless at the Work-Bench, also known as "Bezbust") formed the like-minded Moscow Society of the Godless in August 1924. In November 1924, the Anti-Religious Commission of the All-Union Communist Party (b), and in December, the Organizing Bureau of the Central Committee supported the project of creating an all-Union godless society. A special commission was set up to prepare for the congress of atheists. The first congress of the organization, which took place in April 1925, decided to create a single all-union anti-religious society, called the "Union of Atheists". Well known members of the Communist Party and
Old Bolsheviks such as
Nadezhda Krupskaya,
Anatoly Lunacharsky,
Pyotr Krasikov,
Ivan Skvortsov-Stepanov,
Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich,
Nikolai Bukharin and others participated in the foundation of the organization and Yemelyan Yaroslavsky was elected chairman. In addition to the newspaper
Bezbozhnik, the Central Soviet of the League of Militant Atheists published the illustrated magazine
Bezbozhnik and the scientific and methodological journal
Antireligioznik. The scientific society "Ateist" arose in 1921 in Moscow. It published the magazine
Ateist from 1923 to 1931. This magazine published mainly works translated from foreign languages. Since 1931, the magazine
Voinstvuiuschii ateizm, a periodical of the Central Soviet of the League of Militant Atheists, began to be published. Along with periodicals in Russian, the League of Militant Atheists published periodicals in other languages: • "" () − in Ukrainian, • "
Xudasizlar" (; − transcription: "Khudasyzlyar") − in Uzbek • "" ( ) − in Tatar () • "" () - in Yiddish • "" () – in Armenian • "
Das Neuland" − in German • "
Erdem ba Shazhan" () – in Buryat • "
Mebrdzoli Ateisti" () – in Georgian • "
Bezbożnik wojujący" – in Polish • "
Allahsyz" () – in Azerbaijani • "" () – in Bashkir By 1932, 10 anti-religious newspapers and 23 anti-religious magazines were published in the USSR. The Moscow group tended to support the leftist side of the debate on how to destroy religion (i.e. in favour of attacking religion in all of its forms rather than moderation), and in 1924 it attacked Yaroslavsky,
Anatoly Lunacharsky and
Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich for differentiation between different religions, instead of genuine godlessness. It accused Yaroslavsky of attacking only the clergy rather than religion in general. Yaroslavsky protested this and affirmed that all religions were enemies of socialism including the
Renovationist schism in the Orthodox church, but that the methods of struggle against different religions should vary due to the large number of loyal Soviet citizens with religious beliefs who should be re-educated as atheists rather than treated as class enemies.
Bezbozhnik argued that it was an oversimplification to treat religion solely as a kind of class exploitation to be attacked, forgetting the complex nature of religions, as well as the individual believers. The CPSU Central Committee supported Yaroslavsky's viewpoint on this issue, although this debate remained unresolved at the Union that came in 1925. The Moscow group merged with the Society of Friends of the Godless Newspaper (associated with
Bezbozhnik) in April 1925 to form the All-Union League of the Godless at its first congress. Between 1925 and 1929 a power struggle took place in the new organization between Yaroslavsky and his followers, and the leadership of the former Moscow group (
Galaktionov,
Polidorov,
Kostelovskaia, Lunin and others). The 1926 All-Union Conference on Antireligious Propaganda voted in favour of Yaroslavsky's views on the antireligious campaign, but the debate still continued. The Moscow group argued that the antireligious struggle should be led only by the party and the industrial proletariat, as opposed to the whole nation which Yaroslavsky wanted to mobilize to conduct the antireligious campaign. In 1929, when resolutions that would set the tone for intensive persecution of the next decade were set and Yaroslavsky's victory in the power struggle had been completed, there were a few last attacks made on Yaroslavsky and the organization for minimizing the class-enemy thesis in attacking religion, of having few workers and peasants in its ranks, of using archaeology instead of aggressively attacking religion, of being indifferent to transforming the school system into a fundamentally antireligious atmosphere and of opportunistically citing works by non-Marxist Western bourgeois atheists in publications. In response, Yaroslavsky claimed that they had supported antireligious education for years, but in contrast to the leftists who simply wanted to attack religion, he was working to replace the popular religious ideology with that of
dialectical materialism. He also pointed out correctly that Lenin had used the works of the 18th century French atheists and other bourgeois atheists to assist in the campaign to disseminate atheism in the USSR. He admitted that the effect of their efforts up to that point was less than he had hoped, which he implicitly blamed on the Moscow branch for their lack of cooperation, lack of support from the party and some branches of the Komsomol, and a ban operating on their activities in Ukraine, as well as an inadequate finances. Yaroslavsky,
Stalin's loyal aide in the secretariat and one of the founding editors of
Kommunist, came out on top despite the Moscow group's resistance in an effort to retain autonomy and the support for that group from the daily
''Komsomol'skaia Pravda''. The problems that Yaroslavsky outlined in his response were addressed in 1929 at the second congress. The CPSU Central Committee delegated to the LMA full powers to launch a great antireligious attack with the objective of completely eliminating religion from the country, granting them the right to mobilize all public organizations. The Central Council chose Yaroslavsky as its leader; he occupied this post continuously.
Atheistic periodicals published in various languages File:Bezbozhnik newsparer 18-1923.jpg| language − Russian. Moscow.
Bezbozhnik File:Bezbozhnik 19 -1930.jpg| language − Russian. Moscow.
Bezbozhnik File:Bezhnoznik u stanka 19-1929.jpeg|language − Russian. Moscow.
Bezbozhnik u Stanka File:Amerikansky Bezbozhnik.png | language − Russian. Chicago.
Amerikansky Bezbozhnik (newspaper) File:Войовничий Безвірник.jpg| language − Ukrainian. Kiev. File:Безвірник.png | language − Ukrainian. Kharkiv. File:Neuland.jpg| language − German. Kharkiv.
Das Neuland File:Fen-Em-Din.png | language − Tatar. Moscow. File:Epikoires.jpg| language − Yiddish. Moscow. File:Der Apikoires 1931 № 6.jpg |
El Lissitzky's cover of '''' File:Atheist (magazine).png | language − Russian. Moscow.
Ateist File:1931 Militanta-Ateismo.jpg| language − Russian, German, Esperanto. Moscow.
Voinstvuiuschii ateizm File:Antireligioznik.jpg| language − Russian. Moscow.
Antireligioznik File:ԱՆԱՍՏԿԱԾ.jpg| language − Armenian. Yerevan. File:Derevenskiy Bezbozhnik.jpg| language − Russian. Moscow.
Derevenskiy Bezbozhnik File:Revolution and the Church.png | language − Russian. Moscow. File:Эрдэм ба шажан.jpg| language − Buryat.
Ulan-Ude /
Verkhneudinsk.
Erdem ba Shazhan File:Bezboznik wojujący.png | language − Polish. Moscow.
Bezbożnik Wojujący File:მებრძოლი უღმერთო.png | language − Georgian. Tbilisi.
Mebrdzoli Ughmerto File:Laisvoji mintis 1936 1.jpg | language − Lithuanian. Kaunas. ==Authority on antireligious methodology==