The first reports of
neo-Nazi organizations in the USSR appeared in the second half of the 1950s. In some cases, the participants were attracted primarily by the aesthetics of Nazism (rituals, parades, uniforms, the cult of physical fitness, architecture). Other organizations were more interested in the ideology of the Nazis, their program, and the image of
Adolf Hitler. The formation of neo-Nazism in the USSR dates back to the turn of the 1960s and 1970s; during this period, these organizations still preferred to operate underground. Modern
Russian neo-paganism took shape in the second half of the 1970s and is associated with the activities of supporters of antisemitism, especially the Moscow Arabist
Valery Yemelyanov (pagan name Velemir) and the former dissident and neo-Nazi activist
Alexey Dobrovolsky (pagan name Dobroslav). In 1957, under the influence of the
Hungarian Revolution, Dobrovolsky created the Russian National Socialist Party and was later imprisoned. Since 1964, he collaborated with the
National Alliance of Russian Solidarists. On December 5, 1965, he organized a demonstration on Pushkin Square. In 1968, he was involved in the
Trial of the Four. In 1969, Dobrovolsky bought a library and immersed himself in history, esotericism and parapsychology, collaborating with Valery Yemelyanov. In 1989, he took part in the creation of the "Moscow Pagan Community", which was headed by Alexander Belov (Selidor), and approved the eight-beam "
kolovrat" as a symbol of "resurgent paganism". Since 1990, he collaborated with the neo-pagan
Russian Party of Korchagin. Dobrovolsky conducted the first mass rite of naming, a rite that became widespread in the Rodnovery. Later, he retired to the abandoned village of Vasenyovo in
Kirov Oblast, where he lived as a hermit and spent the summer holidays of Kupala. He led the "Russian Liberation Movement" (ROD).
Valery Yemelyanov (pagan name - Velemir) in 1967 defended his thesis at a Higher Party School. A good knowledge of the Arabic language and the peculiarities of the service allowed Yemelyanov to get extensive contacts in the Arab world, including the most senior officials. From these sources he drew his understanding of "Zionism". Yemelyanov was the author of one of the first manifestos of Russian neo-paganism - an anonymous letter titled "Critical notes of a Russian person on the patriotic magazine "Veche"", published in 1973. After the appearance of the notes, the journal was liquidated in 1974, and its editor, V. Osipov, was arrested. In the 1970s, Yemelyanov wrote the book
Dezionization, first published in 1979 in Arabic in
Syria in the
Al-Baʽath newspaper at the behest of Syrian President
Hafez al-Assad. At the same time, a photocopied copy of this book, allegedly issued by the
Palestine Liberation Organization in Paris, was distributed in Moscow. The book tells about the ancient civilization of the "Aryans-
Veneti" (in particular, ideas from the
Book of Veles are used; for example,
Prav-Yav-Nav), the only autochthons of Europe who lived in harmony with nature and creating the first alphabet, but defeated by the Judeo-"Zionists", who were hybrids of criminals of different races, created by Egyptian and Mesopotamian priests. Since then, the world has been doomed to the eternal struggle of two forces - nationalist patriots and "Talmudic Zionists". According to Yemelyanov, a powerful tool in the hands of "Zionism" is Christianity, created by the Jews specifically for the purpose of enslaving other peoples. To Yemelyanov, Jesus was at the same time "an ordinary Jewish racist" and a "Mason", and Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich was endowed with Jewish blood. Among the illustrations for this book were reproductions of paintings by
Konstantin Vasilyev on the theme of the struggle of Russian heroes with evil forces and, above all, the painting "
Ilya Muromets defeats the Christian plague", which has since become popular with neo-pagans. The dissemination of the ideas described by Yemelyanov in
Dezionization and at lectures in the Knowledge Society in the early 1970s caused an international protest, declared by the American Senator
Jacob Javits to the Soviet Ambassador to the USA
Anatoly Dobrynin in 1973, after which his lectures have been discontinued. Yemelyanov began to accuse a wide range of people of "Zionism", including the ruling elite, headed by Leonid Brezhnev. In 1980, he tried to distribute copies of "Dezionization" among the members of the
Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU and in its secretariat. In 1987, he founded the World Anti-Zionist and Anti-Masonic Front "Pamyat" (the neo-pagan wing of the
"Pamyat" Society). In 1970, a text called "The Word of the Nation" was distributed in the USSR in
samizdat. It expressed the rejection of the liberal democratic ideas that were common at that time among part of the Russian dissidents, and the ideas of a strong state and the formation of a new elite were proclaimed as a program. To maintain order and fight crime, authoritarian power must rely on "people's
druzhinas" (analogue of the "
Black Hundreds") beyond the jurisdiction of any law. The author put forward demands to combat the "infringement of the rights of the Russian people" and "Jewish monopoly in science and culture", "biological degeneration of the white race" due to the spread of "democratic cosmopolitan ideas", "accidental hybridization" of races, a call for a "national revolution", after which "real Russians by blood and spirit" should become the ruling nation. The full Russian version of this document was published in the emigrant magazine
Veche in 1981, where the author wrote about the United States possibly turning into "an instrument for achieving world domination by the black race" and described Russia as having a special mission to save world civilization. The "Word of the Nation" was signed by "Russian patriots". Later it became known that its author was
A. M. Ivanov (Skuratov), one of the founders of the Russian neopagan movement and a supporter of the struggle against "Judeo-Christianity". At the end of 1971, a text entitled "Letter to Solzhenitsyn" signed in the name of "Ivan Samolvin", but written by Yemelyanov, was also distributed in samizdat. The "Letter" talked about the connections of the Jews with the Masons and a secret conspiracy to seize power over the world. The October Revolution is presented as the realization of these secret designs. It is argued that the "true history" of the ancestors of the Russian people is carefully hidden from the people. These documents had a significant impact on the development of Russian racism and neo-Nazism. In Soviet times, Viktor Bezverkhy (Ostromysl) founded the movement of
Peterburgian Vedism (a branch of Slavic neopaganism). He revered Hitler and
Heinrich Himmler and propagated
racial and
antisemitic theories in a narrow circle of his students, calling for the deliverance of mankind from "inferior offspring", allegedly arising from
interracial marriages. He called such "inferior people" "bastards", referred to them as "
Zhyds, Indians or gypsies and
mulattoes" and believed that they prevent society from achieving social justice. At the age of 51, Bezverkhy took an oath "to devote his whole life to the fight against Judaism - the mortal enemy of mankind." The text of this oath, written in blood, was found on him during a search in 1988. Bezverkhy developed the theory of "Vedism", according to which, in particular: "all peoples will be sifted through a sieve of racial identity, the Aryans will be united, Asian, African and Indian elements will be put in their place, and the mulattoes will be eliminated as unnecessary." The first public manifestations of neo-Nazis in Russia took place in 1981 in
Kurgan, and then in
Yuzhnouralsk,
Nizhny Tagil,
Sverdlovsk, and Leningrad. In 1982, on Hitler's birthday, a group of Moscow high school students held a Nazi demonstration on
Pushkinskaya Square. ==See also==