ChrisO Profile picture
Jul 8 35 tweets 15 min read
1/ What do two yachts, a $30,000 watch and the Tsar's former residence have in common? They're all assets of Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church. A 🧵 on how the church's role in the Ukraine war is tied up with its finances and role as an instrument of 'soft power'.
2/ This is the second thread of a series of three (I'll be posting the third part in due course). Here's the first part:
3/ The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) has faced numerous scandals over the past 30 years concerning its financial affairs. But the story really starts with Russia's 40,000 priests and deans, most of whom work in thousands of small towns and villages across the country.
4/ Being a priest is not a route to riches in Russia. In Moscow, they are paid about $450-650 monthly. In rural regions, they may only get minimum wage (around $200 monthly) or less. This isn't nearly enough to keep a church running or pay for household essentials.
5/ So how do priests make ends meet? By soliciting donations for every kind of rite - saying prayers, consecrating new cars and apartments, baptisms, selling candles. Some priests also earn money through secular means such as farming, baking, driving taxis and so on.
6/ Some donation value is retained by the priest to enable him to survive and maintain his church, but the rest (reportedly up to 50%) goes 'upstairs' to the local dean - the priest's immediate superior - and the diocese, which in turn remits up to 15% to Moscow.
7/ So the key to being a successful ROC priest is finding a rich donor, such as a local businessman or oligarch. Rural priests often only have a small and poor population from which to solicit donations. Thus churches proliferate in towns and cities and stagnate in villages.
8/ However, the church is very secretive about its finances. Its accounts are not published and it reportedly does not disclose donations even to the government: "when you give to someone in need, don't let your left hand know what your right hand is doing" (Matthew 6:3).
9/ This means that the ROC's operations are intimately intertwined with wealth-producers, in a country rated the 136th most corrupt in the world (out of 180). This brings us back to Kirill's famous Breguet wristwatch, yachts and residences.
10/ The $30K watch, donated by an anonymous benefactor, caused controversy after a clumsy attempt to remove it from a photo - it was airbrushed out but the photo editor forgot to remove its reflection in a polished table top. Several leading ROC clergy have had similar scandals.
11/ Another benefactor, the Russian oil company Lukoil, donated the $4-6 million yacht Pallada for Kirill's use. He is also reported to have his own personal Azimuth luxury yacht in the Mediterranean, worth around €700,000 - possibly also donated by a benefactor.
12/ Businessmen have provided free air transportation to Kirill, such as the use of a $43 million Gulfstream G450 jet to travel around Russia. The Russian state also has also flown Kirill to destinations as far afield as Antarctica aboard a government Il-96-300 jet.
13/ The state-owned Federovsky Godorok, a massive residential complex built for Tsar Nicholas II near St Petersburg, is currently being renovated at public expense - costing in total around $47 million - for use as the Patriarch's official residence.
14/ Kirill and his relatives also reportedly own multiple apartments and properties around Moscow and St Petersburg, which the publication Project has valued at around 316 million rubles (or about $5 million). It's unclear where the money for this came from.
15/ Since 2010, the Russian government has 'restored' thousands of state-owned properties to the ROC, although many like the Federovsky Godorok were never church property in the first place. Private landowners built and owned many places of worship in Tsarist times.
16/ These relationships have made the ROC heavily dependent on the oligarchs and the state, and it's a connection that goes both ways. But the church is itself a big business, due in part to the work of the current Patriarch, Kirill.
17/ In 1989, Kirill - while serving as metropolitan bishop of Smolensk and Kaliningrad - headed the ROC's Department for External Church Relations (DECR), responsible for the church's relations overseas. Kirill already had long experience in this area as a church representative.
18/ The DECR almost certainly had close links to the Soviet regime. As I mentioned in my previous thread, Kirill himself was allegedly a KGB agent codenamed MIKHAILOV, according to KGB files. But the collapse of the USSR in 1991 led to the DECR taking on new commercial roles.
19/ The post-communist Russian state granted the ROC privileges as 'humanitarian aid'. From 1994 to 1997, the ROC was allowed to import tobacco duty-free. The church imported 8 billion cigarettes which it sold at below market prices, making it one of Russia's largest suppliers.
20/ The exposure of this arrangement led to a major scandal, in which Kirill was nicknamed the 'Tobacco Metropolitan' for his role in managing it. The import arrangement was terminated by then-Patriarch Alexey II when it became too controversial for comfort.
21/ The ROC was also allowed to import and sell wine. The Nikolo-Ugreshky Monastery, which is directly subordinated to the patriarchate, earned $350 million from the sale of alcohol in 1995 alone. The church also reportedly had interests in oil, gems and selling bottled water.
22/ One of the church's biggest money-earners is its Sofrino factory. It makes and sells ecclesiastical items such as vestments, furniture, icons and candles to priests and the faithful throughout Russia - charging premium prices for its products.
23/ According to Russian media reports, the church's income in 2014 alone reached 5.6 billion rubles (about $150 million at the time). Its revenues are not taxed. The state also provided 14 billion rubles ($183 million) in funding to the ROC between 2012 and 2015.
24/ Media reports allege that Kirill has become extremely wealthy during his time in office. Forbes estimated his wealth at $4 billion, and Novaya Gazeta suggested $4 billion to $8 billion in 2019. Either way, Kirill would qualify as one of the richest men in Russia.
25/ The ROC under Kirill has used its wealth and influence strategically to boost Russia's 'soft power' internationally, including by positioning itself as a future leader of worldwide Orthodoxy and seeking to replace the Church of Constantinople in that traditional role.
26/ This is very much Kirill's personal initiative. As Metropolitan of Smolensk, he said that the ROC should take first place among Orthodox patriarchates. "We are the rightful heirs of Byzantium," Kirill has said. This would give Russia huge influence over Orthodox believers.
27/ The ROC has used its influence abroad to help Russian interests. It has opposed Moldova's aspirations for EU membership on the grounds that it would require tolerance for homosexuality. The church's Moldovan affiliate has organised public anti-LGBT protests.
28/ In Montenegro, the ROC has played a major role in trying to undermine the country's efforts to break away from Serbia. The pro-Russian Serbian Orthodox Church is strongly opposed to Montenegro's NATO and EU integration, and Russia sponsored a coup attempt there in 2016.
29/ The ROC is also a vital channel for Russia's communications with Iran, with which it has co-hosted an Islam-Orthodoxy Dialogue that meets alternately in Moscow and Tehran every few years. Russia has the largest Muslim population in Europe, so is in a unique position.
30/ In Africa, the ROC has embarked on an ambitious programme of building schools and medical facilities. It is providing material aid alongside military aid provided by the Russian state. It encourages members of other denominations to switch their allegiances to Orthodoxy.
31/ The ROC has also influenced the American and European far-right. It supports organisations such as the World Congress of Families to coordinate opposition to same-sex marriage and toleration of homosexuality. The ROC promotes Russia as a defender of 'traditional values'.
32/ This has had significant international impact - some US conservatives have even converted to Eastern Orthodoxy. It also likely explains Hungary's far-right government deciding to block the EU's plan to sanction Patriarch Kirill, likely seeing him as an ally on social policy.
33/ However, the ROC's soft power has taken a heavy blow in the last few months due to its positions over Ukraine and Patriarch Kirill's outspoken support for the war. I'll cover those issues in the final thread in this series.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with ChrisO

ChrisO Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ChrisO_wiki

Jul 5
1/ The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) has emerged as a major player in the war in Ukraine. The UK has sanctioned its head, Patriarch Kirill, and the EU attempted to do so but was blocked by opposition from Hungary. Why is the ROC in such a controversial position? 1st 🧵 of three.
2/ The Orthodox Churches of eastern Europe have played a hugely important role in the development of their countries. This was brought home to me when I spent Easter this year in Bulgaria, enjoying the Orthodox Easter - a beautiful and very spiritual festival.
3/ From remote and beautiful places such as Bulgaria's Rila Monastery, the Orthodox Church nurtured Christian culture during the long centuries of Ottoman occupation. Rila had Bulgaria's first printing press and produced the country's first Bulgarian-language grammar book.
Read 36 tweets
Jul 3
Three essential threads for understanding how the situation in the Donbas is likely to evolve in the next few days and weeks:
Read 4 tweets
Jul 3
@ian_matveev has posted another very insightful and admirably realistic thread on the situation in the Donbas following the fall, or imminent fall, of Lysychansk. It's well worth a read. An English translation follows:
Putin's army is taking over Lysychansk. Let's do a brief dissection of the situation and in particular discuss why the Ukrainian army is forced to continually retreat in Donbass. Thread ⬇️
1. A week has passed since Zolote was encircled. During this time the Russian Army called up its reserves to attack Lysychansk, which was in an artillery pocket, with strikes from three sides.
Read 34 tweets
Jul 2
1/ Being a Russian soldier in Ukraine isn't fun. The food is lousy, you're living in squalid conditions, you're constantly being shot at and most of your unit is already dead or wounded. What to do? Report to the nearest Mobile Point for Military-Political Work, comrade! A 🧵.
2/ The collapse of Communism left the Russian army with a motivation problem: if you're no longer fighting for a global proletarian revolution, what exactly is the cause you're fighting for? Putin's Russia has tried to address this in a number of ways.
3/ In early 2018, the Russian Ministry of Defence announced the reintroduction of the Main Military-Political Directorate (GVPU). The GVPU, which had been discontinued after 1991, was originally responsible for Soviet military 'political officers' - known as zampolits.
Read 19 tweets
Jul 1
Russia is evidently getting worried about the threat to the Crimea Bridge from Ukraine's new long-range weapons - it's using smoke generators to try to hide the bridge.
Generating smoke is quite pointless though because (1) it's the longest bridge in Europe - how do you hide that? And (2) those new weapons aren't a serious threat to the bridge, for reasons I explain in the thread below. I think this is just being done to reassure civilians.
Read 6 tweets
Jun 30
Snake Island has been hit again. "During the night, as a result of a successful first phase of a military operation involving a military air strike by missile and artillery units against Snake Island, ...
... the enemy successfully evacuated the garrison's remnants with two speedboats and may have abandoned the island."
"Currently, Snake Island is covered with fire, explosions are heard. The final results of the operation are being investigated." Image
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(