1949-03-15-03 |
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aurch FREE L A T V I A N N A T T Q R Ä L N E V V S P A P E R FOR N O R T H A M E R I CA P U B L I S H E R ; K o N R A D S P O B E L I S E D I T O R - I N ^ G H I E i i : A L E K S A N D R S K U N D R A T S OF LATVIA BEHIND^^^V THE IRON CURTAIN The burning St: Peto-^s Church (June 29, 19/fl) a torch of death heralding the darkest days of Baltic history when Eastern hordes treacher-öits and full of hatred, stoarmed over our country and later met on our territory in sanguinary bdttles the second century-long oppreasor of the Latvian peoplc- — the troops of the Germnn conqnerors — travipling (iow}i our country, dcstroying frc-dovi, nation and cradles. BRETHREN IN CHRIST! Our World which is longing for a redlpeace must realize that struggles fought y)ith the aid of tangible arnis reveal af times the underlying clash of ideologies. The present state of tension in international affairs is thus largely caused by the abysmdl differences in the world outlook-clearly evidenced by the conflictbetween the Christian Wortd and the totalitarian Communism during the past decades-rather than by econo-mic, poUtical and social contrasts. During the past few years we have witnessed the Iron Curtain to go' down on an increasing number of Churches. The anti-Christian iron-hard regime prevailing behindt^is curtain has. already annihilated some of these Churches. Others are involved in a death-and-life struggle,while d number hope against hope for a compromise and for some chance of escaping from their staked-out.fate. DieapitG - the blood of so ntany Christian martyrs, that has been shed and is still being shed in streams, despite repeated new fearless professions of truth there are many Christians who remain indifferent to the fate qf these perseeuted Churches and blind to the dangers. threatening themselves. .; Commemorating the martyrdom of our nation and our church, in a ' spirit of close solidarity with Christianity throughout the world; we deem it to be cur sacred duty to bear witness to that to nourish and preach the. conviction of a possibility of eliminating the opposition betioeen the Christian Church and Communism is erroneous; to believe that we have time calmly to watch and see whether and from where modern Christianity is threatened by a danger means lack ,of a sense • of .responsibility toward . the Christian martyrs and treason of the Christian civilization. - Repeated statementsby leading Christian officials that the Church IS a phenomenon which is essentially unaffeetedby the intricate inter-dependencies of this world and this era means a cowardly avoidance of contributing to the overcoming of the existing chaos in the 'World. •A Church which leaves the believers withoi[.t support and. guidqnce : in thesolution of poUtical, economic and sociatproblems, fails to fulfil the mission given by Jesus Christ — to go to every man in every situation. ••^ Christianity becomes a notion devoid of any meaning if it does not have a bearing upon the actual life and if the Gospel remains without the Christian man who realizes it in his life and in the world. In this World of complications and sufferings; many turn their eyes tovoards the fire of unity kindled by the Swedish Ar-chbishop Nathan Söderblom, a man of genius and the uniter of the Christian Churches. This fire has fed the hopes of the Christian fighters for a spiritually united and active Church, '~'"It is a source of satisfaction to see thattkese oecumenical endeavours are taking sha/pe as evidencedi by the numerous meetings of different Christian Churches in the postwar period in which the demand for a united Christian message to the people becomes increasingly stronger. This shoivs that actually the timeofdecision has come when the Church can anew show'the invincible force of the Gospel, which is eternally living in struggles and sacrifices. . We Christians. must fully realize tkat we are largely responsible for the present ^oorld situation, that we have not always and everywhere been neither the good sait of the earth nor the light of the World. Only solidarity, evidenced by actions, between those whq already have suffered the martyrdom of their faith, who fight, and ihose who are still free can prot^ct the Christian Church from the threatening destruction. . The Fate of tlip I.a<vian I.utheran Church under The First Soviet Oceiipation (June 1940—July 1941). A,/ Idcplqgic, Organizational and Economic Pcrsecution of the Church. A manifesto issucd in June 1940 by the Commuriist göVernmenl vvhich was established vvitli the aid of the Soviet Russian troops sub-jected ali organizations, including the Ghurch; to State power, nationa-lized ali Ghurch land and prpperty, and introduced the so-ealIed"freedom of anti-religious propaganda", With Latvia's incorporationwith the Soviet Union on August 5 tli 1940, ali laws of the Latvian Republic were rendered invalid and the Constitution of the.Latvian Lutheran Church was simultaneously abo-lished. Instead, the Soviet Russian Ghurch Law of 1928 was made applicablc aiso in Latvia. At a tune wlieii the rig^hts of every individual and the sovereign rights of every nation have been laid doYvn in charters, and a war has been fought to liberate humanity from fear, subjection and pcrsecution, behind the Iron Gurtain the Latvian nation treads the road of destruction, stumbling over the sign of the cross, and the Ghurch of Latvia, deserted and alone, fights on stig-matizing the entire 20th century. The dove of peace has no place of rest in Latvia, it. must retum in despair as the cities and villages there are fuU of sighs and the blood of the perseeuted brothers of faith. 1. P e r f o r m an c e of g i o u s R i t es W a s Di s i u r b cd. Di vi n c S e r v i e c s ;J n d R c 1 i- P r o h i b i 1 c d, R c s t r i c t o d o r a. b. c. d. 2. No divine scrvices could, be hcld outside Ghurch premises vvithout permits issued by conrmanders of löcal Russian garrisons or loeal leaders of the, Gommunist party, This order implied that divine Services in ccmeteries. club houses, schools, and private homes werc cither entirely prohibited or restrictod. Simultaneously with divine scrvices, mass" meetings were held in squares in front of churches, and demonstration marches werc orga-nized to cemetcries when cercmonics were to take place there. BaptismSi Church marriages and funerals vvere forbidden to members of the Communist party and trade unions, and to their familics. In February 1941 a pastor was threatened with arrest for perform-ing the funeral scrvices for a member of a trade uniön at the Riga Municipal Gemetery, The Communist party and the Political Police contrölled ali divine Services and churehgoers. and the local sections of the Communist Party reported ali churehgoers to the Police. The Communist party nevvspapers published distorted reports on sermons, and. harsh attacks were hurled against pastors who delivered these sermons. Des t r u c t i o n, A 1 i en a t i o n a n d P r o f a n at i o n of G h u r c h e s an d O t h e r P 1 ä c e s and S y m b o I s o f W o rs h i p. Reverend OSKARS SAKARNIS T T. Grinbcrgs, Archbishop of Latvia, perseeuted by the war and the enemies qf the Latvian-people, driven axoay from his sanc-tuariea and his country together with the vast cöngregationof refugees, prays to God xoherever the chance comes — under Sky, in the miserdble barracks DP, pr the\ churches of other countries who kindly have given refuge to the tormented fugi-tives ;. ., Under the Nationalization Law of July 1940, ali church buildings and lands became property of the Communist State. The State reserved for. itself the right of alienating this property orpermittingits further use by the congregations. a. Only a part of thp churches, places qf worship, and former property of the congregations was left for use by the latter. The pertinent decisions -were made in disregard .of the inter-ests of the congregations; the views of the local scction of the Communist party being the controUing factor. The State aliena-ted entirely 4 Lutheran churches (in Riga, Liepäja, Ludza and Daugavpils), 40 prayer^houses, .15 congregation houses, 240 parso-nages and 150 ccmeteries. • b. . Excessive rentals and other taxes made the operation by the con-r gregations of churches and other premises extremely difficult. The rental which congregations had to pay for churches was ten times that of rents paid for housing space. In Vecpiebalga (in the pro-vince of Vidzeme), a congregation of 3,000 members was to paj for the church an annual rental amounting to 18,000 rubles (appro-ximately 12,000 Swiss francs). . The churches and places of worship which were not returned^^for use to the congregations were used for purposes offending religious fee^ lings: churches were used as Storage space or moving-picture theatres, parsonages as Machine and Tractor Stations, consecrated ccmeteries Avereliquidated — the symbol of the cross being rentoved by the saw or the spade. ; aa. The Church of Our Saviour in Riga was. since June 1940 an Army warehouse; the church in Ludza (province of Lätgale) was turned into a cinema; Machine and Tractor Stations were established in the parsonages in Lubana and Liezere. bb. The cross «an the cupola of the Garrison Church in Liepajä was removed by the saw. cc. The cross in the Riga Municipal Cemetery was removed by the saw and the cemetery wasdeclared to be a burial place at which . Christian riteswere forbidden. Crosses weFe not permitted ön tlTe tombs. Infliction of damäges to churches was not bindered ör penalizgil under the law. Members of the Communist youth smashed window glasaof the Biksti Church in the province of Kurzeme. The retreating Soviet troops also applied "scorched earth— tactics in Latvia to churches. - _ / aa: St. Peter's Church in Riga, a structure of great historical and architectural value, was burnt on June 29, 1941.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Brivais Laveitis, March 15, 1949 |
Language | la |
Subject | Latvian Canadians -- History -- Periodicals |
Publisher | K. Dobelis |
Date | 1949-03-15 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | Brivai490315 |
Description
Title | 1949-03-15-03 |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
OCR text |
aurch FREE L A T V I A N N A T T Q R Ä L N E V V S P A P E R FOR N O R T H A M E R I CA
P U B L I S H E R ; K o N R A D S P O B E L I S E D I T O R - I N ^ G H I E i i : A L E K S A N D R S K U N D R A T S
OF LATVIA BEHIND^^^V
THE IRON CURTAIN
The burning St: Peto-^s
Church (June 29, 19/fl) a
torch of death heralding the
darkest days of Baltic history
when Eastern hordes treacher-öits
and full of hatred, stoarmed
over our country and later met
on our territory in sanguinary
bdttles the second century-long
oppreasor of the Latvian peoplc-
— the troops of the Germnn
conqnerors — travipling (iow}i
our country, dcstroying frc-dovi,
nation and cradles.
BRETHREN IN CHRIST!
Our World which is longing for a redlpeace must realize that struggles
fought y)ith the aid of tangible arnis reveal af times the underlying
clash of ideologies. The present state of tension in international affairs
is thus largely caused by the abysmdl differences in the world outlook-clearly
evidenced by the conflictbetween the Christian Wortd and the
totalitarian Communism during the past decades-rather than by econo-mic,
poUtical and social contrasts.
During the past few years we have witnessed the Iron Curtain to go'
down on an increasing number of Churches. The anti-Christian iron-hard
regime prevailing behindt^is curtain has. already annihilated some of
these Churches. Others are involved in a death-and-life struggle,while d
number hope against hope for a compromise and for some chance of
escaping from their staked-out.fate.
DieapitG - the blood of so ntany Christian martyrs, that has been
shed and is still being shed in streams, despite repeated new fearless
professions of truth there are many Christians who remain indifferent
to the fate qf these perseeuted Churches and blind to the dangers.
threatening themselves.
.; Commemorating the martyrdom of our nation and our church, in a
' spirit of close solidarity with Christianity throughout the world; we
deem it to be cur sacred duty to bear witness to that to nourish and
preach the. conviction of a possibility of eliminating the opposition
betioeen the Christian Church and Communism is erroneous; to believe
that we have time calmly to watch and see whether and from where
modern Christianity is threatened by a danger means lack ,of a sense
• of .responsibility toward . the Christian martyrs and treason of the
Christian civilization. -
Repeated statementsby leading Christian officials that the Church
IS a phenomenon which is essentially unaffeetedby the intricate inter-dependencies
of this world and this era means a cowardly avoidance of
contributing to the overcoming of the existing chaos in the 'World.
•A Church which leaves the believers withoi[.t support and. guidqnce
: in thesolution of poUtical, economic and sociatproblems, fails to fulfil
the mission given by Jesus Christ — to go to every man in every
situation. ••^
Christianity becomes a notion devoid of any meaning if it does not
have a bearing upon the actual life and if the Gospel remains without
the Christian man who realizes it in his life and in the world.
In this World of complications and sufferings; many turn their eyes
tovoards the fire of unity kindled by the Swedish Ar-chbishop Nathan
Söderblom, a man of genius and the uniter of the Christian Churches.
This fire has fed the hopes of the Christian fighters for a spiritually
united and active Church,
'~'"It is a source of satisfaction to see thattkese oecumenical endeavours
are taking sha/pe as evidencedi by the numerous meetings of different
Christian Churches in the postwar period in which the demand for a
united Christian message to the people becomes increasingly stronger.
This shoivs that actually the timeofdecision has come when the
Church can anew show'the invincible force of the Gospel, which is
eternally living in struggles and sacrifices.
. We Christians. must fully realize tkat we are largely responsible for
the present ^oorld situation, that we have not always and everywhere
been neither the good sait of the earth nor the light of the World.
Only solidarity, evidenced by actions, between those whq already
have suffered the martyrdom of their faith, who fight, and ihose who
are still free can prot^ct the Christian Church from the threatening
destruction. .
The Fate of tlip I.a |
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