How US Evangelicals Fueled the Rise of Russia’s  ‘Pro-Family’ Right 
 
An alliance is born between anti-gay, anti-abortion American groups  and 
the Russian Orthodox Church.
_Adam Federman_ (http://www.thenation.com/authors/adam-federman)  
January 7,  2014   |    _This article appeared in  the January 27, 2014 
edition of The Nation._ (http://www.thenation.com/issue/january-27-2014)  

 
 
This past June, the Russian Parliament passed an anti-gay law that came as 
a  surprise to much of the rest of the world. The statute, an amendment to 
the  country’s Code of Administrative Offenses, bans “propaganda” regarding  
“nontraditional sexual relations among minors.” (In earlier versions of 
the  bill, it was simply referred to as “homosexual propaganda.”) The bill’s 
language  is so vague that it could include just about any kind of gay 
rights advocacy,  from newspaper editorials and advertisements to public 
information campaigns and  demonstrations. Among the penalties: fines of up to 
5,000 
rubles for an  individual and 1 million rubles for a media organization or 
other legal entity.  (A few days later, a bill banning the adoption of 
Russian children by same-sex  couples in countries that recognize gay marriage 
was also passed.) In November,  the editor of a newspaper in the far eastern 
city of Khabarovsk was charged  under the new law after quoting an LGBT 
activist saying, “My entire existence is  credible proof of the normality of 
homosexuality.”  
Though it sparked worldwide condemnation at a moment when Russia is poised 
to  host the Sochi Olympics, the bill in effect codified existing social 
policy.  Several regions, including St. Petersburg and Novosibirsk, had already 
passed  similar laws; gay rights demonstrations have been routinely banned; 
and LGBT  activists have lived for years in a climate of fear, enduring 
beatings, arrests  and harassment. 
The anti-gay measure is the product of a growing conservative movement in  
Russia spearheaded by the Orthodox Church and sympathetic lawmakers. Its 
goals  are not only to criminalize homosexuality, but to limit access to 
abortion and  reproductive healthcare and to aggressively promote the 
“traditional 
family”  through state subsidies and other benefits. In 2011, the 
parliament passed a law  restricting abortion access that pro-choice activists 
regard 
as the first volley  in an effort to ban the procedure altogether. Clinics 
were required to list the  potential negative side effects of an abortion—
like the warning on a pack of  cigarettes—in any advertisements. More 
recently, a bill was passed prohibiting  doctors’ offices or health clinics 
from 
advertising that they perform abortions  at all. Yelena Mizulina, head of the 
Duma’s Committee on Family, Women and  Children’s Affairs, which has 
formulated much of the new legislation, has said  her primary task in the 
upcoming 
session will be to further restrict access to  abortion and limit the 
availability of emergency contraception. Meanwhile,  numerous think tanks, 
advocacy groups and charitable organizations with close  ties to the Kremlin 
have 
taken up the cause.
 
* * * 
This rising Russian social conservative movement frequently invokes the  
argument that pro-gay and women’s rights groups are puppets of the West, which 
 is seeking to undermine Russian autonomy and interfere in the country’s 
internal  affairs. At an annual meeting of journalists and academics presided 
over by  Vladimir Putin in Valdai in September, the Russian president said 
that European  countries had strayed from their roots by legalizing gay 
marriage. He urged  Russians to embrace the conservative values of the Orthodox 
Church and other  traditional religions and issued a warning to those who 
might want to challenge  those values. “Russia’s sovereignty, independence, 
and territorial integrity are  unconditional—these are red lines no one is 
allowed to cross,” he declared. 
Several LGBT rights groups have been targeted under another new law, which  
requires any nongovernmental organization that receives funding from other  
countries for political activities to register as a “foreign agent.” 
Failure to  do so can lead to investigations, legal action or crippling fines. 
The  implication is that these groups are not only agents of the West but also 
out of  touch with everyday Russians. 
The irony is that it is the new conservative vanguard—anti-gay, 
anti-abortion  and pro–“traditional family”—that has most successfully 
cultivated the 
West’s  financial and institutional support. Scott Lively, an extreme 
anti-gay  campaigner, all but took credit for the new law, calling it “one of 
the 
proudest  achievements of my career,” while Brian Brown, president of the 
National  Organization for Marriage, visited Moscow with much fanfare just 
before the new  law was passed. But the language of Russia’s anti-gay and 
anti-abortion movement  seems to borrow most heavily from mainstream 
evangelicals and conservative  politicians in the United States and Europe. 
Referring 
to the anti-abortion bill  passed in 2011, Lyubov Erofeeva, executive 
director of the Russian Association  for Population and Development, a women’s 
advocacy group, said: “It was 100  percent clear that everything was copied 
from 
the experience of American  fundamentalists and conservative circles of 
several European countries where  abortion is forbidden or restricted severely.”
 
The church’s close ties with American evangelicals reflect a shift in 
policy.  For much of the post-Soviet period, the Russian Orthodox Church held 
evangelical  denominations at arm’s length, fearing that they would compete for 
influence  within Russia. But as the church has consolidated its power, it 
has come to view  the evangelical community as a partner. “The ROC realizes 
that the evangelical  denominations are not their opponents but rather their 
allies in the relations  between the church and the secular population,” 
says Olga Kazmina, a professor  of ethnology at Moscow State University.  
“It’s a re-envisioned paradigm,” says Father Leonid Kishkovsky, head of 
the  Orthodox Church in America’s Department of External Affairs. In many 
ways, it  makes sense, he adds: both religious groups share an ideological 
commitment and  have grown disillusioned with the way mainline churches have 
dealt with issues  like gay marriage and abortion. “But what I’m quite nervous 
about is the  ideological core which actually motivates both sides,” 
Kishkovsky says. “Where  is the motivating force? Is it in faith? Or is it in 
political  ideology?”  
The Russian Orthodox Church’s chief emissary to the US evangelical 
community  is Hilarion Alfeyev, a high-ranking bishop and chairman of the 
powerful  
Department of External Church Relations (the position previously held by  
Patriarch Kirill). In February 2011, the 47-year-old Alfeyev traveled to  
Washington, where he met with prominent evangelical and “pro-family” leaders;  
and then to Dallas, where he addressed thousands of members of the Highland 
Park  Presbyterian Church and emphasized the importance of “creat[ing] new 
alliances,”  especially around issues of marriage, abortion and the family. 
Alfeyev also  visited the Dallas Theological Seminary and had an hour-long 
meeting with George  W. Bush.  
The trip to Dallas grew out of an increasingly close friendship between  
church leaders and a small circle of American and European Christian 
businessmen  in Moscow. Alfeyev’s visit was organized by Jerry Fullinwider, an 
oil 
executive  and elder of the Highland Park church who, until recently, had 
business  interests in Russia. Fullinwider, a member of the Koch brothers’ 
circle of major  donors—those who have given more than $1 million to 
Koch-related 
causes—met  Alfeyev through his friend Bob Foresman, head of Barclay’s 
Capital in Russia.  This select group of businessmen has unusual access to 
Alfeyev. In an interview  for this article, Fullinwider described having dinner 
at Alfeyev’s private  residence on a recent trip to Moscow. “He’s a real 
busy guy,” says Fullinwider.  “He’s very, very hard to get in touch with 
unless you have a special number and  you know the main guy who handles him, 
who’
s a good friend of mine.”   
Alfeyev’s first trip to the United States paved the way for others, and in  
October 2012 he delivered a lecture at Villanova University, where he 
received  an honorary degree and paid a visit to the Milwaukee-based Lynde and 
Harry  Bradley Foundation. One of the largest donor organizations of its kind 
in the  United States, the Bradley Foundation, with more than $600 million 
in assets, is  known for its contributions to US conservative groups like the 
Heritage  Foundation and the Heartland Institute. But its charity isn’t 
limited to home:  over the last four years, the foundation has given $750,000 
to the St. Gregory  the Theologian Charity Foundation in Moscow, a new 
educational and cultural  initiative founded in 2009 by Alfeyev, Russian 
billionaire and pharmaceutical  magnate Vadim Yakunin, and Leonid Sevastianov, 
a 
35-year-old international  business consultant and head of Stratinvest.ru, a 
consulting and public  relations firm. In 2009, through Alfeyev’s charity, the 
Bradley Foundation  donated $150,000 to support the “Day of the Family,” a 
recently created Russian  holiday honoring faith and fidelity. The annual 
event has been championed by  Svetlana Medvedeva, wife of Prime Minister 
Dmitri Medvedev, a staunch  anti-abortion advocate. 
“We want to promote the idea of the unity between the West and Russia on 
the  basis of common Christian roots,” Sevastianov told Inside the Vatican  
magazine in 2009. “We believe in this alliance among traditional Christian  
countries…and we believe that, with a united voice, we can be a strong force  
against the radical secular world which has become dominant in our  
societies.”  
* * * 
The push to deepen ties with American evangelicals, to present a united  
front, coincides with the church’s broadening influence within Russia. In 
State  Department cables published by WikiLeaks in 2010, then–US Ambassador to 
Russia  John Beyrle described a meeting with Alfeyev in which the bishop 
admitted that  the Russian Orthodox Church “has been extending its reach 
further 
into  heretofore secular areas of society” like education. “Calling the 
ROC ‘a  significant actor’ in the life of the country,” Beyrle wrote, “
Hilarion said  that Patriarch Kirill is ‘not only symbolic,’ but can also 
influence major  currents in Russia, including its political development.”  
In his remarks at Villanova in 2012, Alfeyev emphasized the importance of  
bringing together the symbolic and political power of the church. “It is  
essential,” he said, “to protect and support a cultural tradition which is  
favorable to the family,” and to take “an active part in the creation of  
legislation that favors the family and its natural foundation.”  
Clearly, the church’s efforts are beginning to pay off within the country,  
while Russia has also emerged as a leader in the international “pro-family”
  movement. 
In 2011, the World Congress of Families held its first Demographic Summit 
in  Moscow. Established in 1997 by Dr. Allan Carlson, the WCF is an 
interfaith,  international movement whose mission is to “restore the natural 
family 
as the  fundamental social unit.” Back in 1995, Carlson was invited to speak 
at Moscow  State University by two professors of sociology who admired his 
book Family  Questions: Reflections on the American Social Crisis. According 
to Jennifer  Butler in Born Again: The Christian Right Globalized, “The 
professors  and Carlson, joined by a lay leader in the Russian Orthodox Church, 
came to the  conclusion that what they needed was to bring together scholars 
and leaders from  ‘newly free Europe and Russia’ to meet with leaders from 
the West.” The first  global conference was held in Prague in 1997 and drew 
more than 700  participants.  
The 2011 summit was attended by leading US evangelicals like Janice Shaw  
Crouse of Concerned Women for America and Larry Jacobs of the WCF. The meeting
’s  Russian attendees included not only church heavyweights but Natalia 
Yakunina,  chair of the Sanctity of Motherhood Program and wife of Vladimir 
Yakunin, the  head of the state-run Russian Railways and a member of Putin’s 
inner circle. In  promotional material, the WCF claims that the 2011 summit “
helped pass the first  Russian laws restricting abortion in modern history.” 
The WCF held a follow-up  Demographic Summit in Ulyanovsk in 2012. 
* * * 
The organizer of the events and the WCF’s representative in Russia is 
Alexey  Komov, a 41-year-old doctoral candidate in the social sciences at 
Moscow 
State  University. Komov, who studied in the United States and the United 
Kingdom, is  part of a new generation of young anti-choice activists in Russia 
who are  drawing on tactics that have come to define the battle over 
reproductive rights  in the United States: they have adopted the phrase 
“pro-life”
 to describe  themselves, regularly picket health clinics that perform 
abortions, and have  launched national campaigns that stigmatize the procedure, 
often using graphic  and misleading language and images. In recent years, 
anti-choice groups in  Russia have developed hundreds of websites and 
attracted funding from several  foundations supported by leading political and 
cultural figures. “They are  growing like mushrooms,” says Lyubov Erofeeva. “
They are attracting young people  with little knowledge, with little life 
experience.” 
Komov has established his own group, FamilyPolicy.ru, whose mission is to  
create a network of “grassroots pro-family activists” in Russia to 
influence  legislation, policy-makers and the media. A rising star in Russia’s 
conservative  movement, Komov began working with the Orthodox Church’s 
Department 
of External  Relations under Alfeyev in January 2012. According to a WCF 
newsletter, “His  responsibilities include Church relations with institutions 
in foreign  countries,” from political parties and think tanks to 
foundations and NGOs. In  December 2012, with support from the Duma’s Committee 
on 
Family, Women and  Children and the Orthodox Church, Komov announced the 
creation of the National  Parents Association. Janice Shaw Crouse attended the 
organizing conference in  Nizhny Novgorod and hailed the NPA’s effort to “
strengthen the two-parent,  mom-and-dad family.” Komov will serve as the group’
s CEO. 
The anti-choice lobby in Russia has been winning slow but steady change in  
the laws governing access to abortion. In the early 1990s, there was strong 
 federal support for family planning services in Russia, and hundreds of 
clinics  providing free reproductive healthcare were established. Though the 
coverage was  uneven, the effort represented an important push to integrate 
women’s  reproductive needs into the larger healthcare system. A public 
information  campaign was launched, according to Erofeeva, who is also an 
ob-gyn. 
 Postgraduate programs for gynecologists covering new methods of  
contraception—especially the pill, which had not been available during the  
Soviet 
period—were introduced. Abortions, which had become a default form of  
contraception during Soviet times, when methods of preventing pregnancy were  
limited, declined by almost 30 percent. “That was the flourishing of  
family-planning ideas,” Erofeeva says. But funding dried up after the collapse  
of the 
ruble in 1998 and the financial crisis that followed. The federal program  
was eliminated. According to a 2007 USAID report, “The future of family 
planning  provision became unclear as regions were left to determine if and how 
to finance  family planning at the regional and municipal levels.” At its 
peak in 1998,  there were more than 400 well-financed family-planning centers 
throughout  Russia, according to Erofeeva; in 2012, there were only 
twenty-one.  
In the next decade, little attention was paid to family planning. Instead,  
the Ministry of Health shifted its emphasis to incentivizing birth. By the 
time  the Duma began drafting a new law in 2010 overhauling the country’s 
healthcare  system, reproductive rights and women’s health were no longer a 
top priority. In  early 2010, Yelena Mizulina, the chair of the Duma’s 
Committee on Family, Women  and Children, established an interdepartmental 
working 
group to draft  anti-choice legislation. The group was made up of nineteen 
people, seven of them  representatives of the Orthodox Church, including 
Dmitry Pershin, head of the  church’s youth council, and Maxim Obukhov, founder 
and chair of the church’s  anti-abortion medical center, Zhizn (Life). 
(Pershin has been one of the most  vocal advocates of the ban on gay 
“propaganda.”
)  
Erofeeva, who was invited by chance to observe one of the group’s early  
meetings, says she was horrified to discover that the committee did not 
include  a single medical doctor: “They worked for nine or ten months and 
prepared 
the  new law, which of course was not called the ‘anti-abortion law’—it 
was called  ‘In the interests of the unborn child.’… So they were playing 
this card that in  Russia there are so many abortions and the birthrate is very 
low and we’re  killing our unborn babies.”  
Rather than risk a protracted battle over the controversial law, Mizulina  
took parts of the legislation drafted by the working group and inserted them 
 into the health reform bill signed by Medvedev in November 2011. The law 
limits  abortions to the first trimester (with the exceptions of rape and 
risk to the  life of the mother) and institutes a mandatory waiting period of 
two to seven  days. Similar laws restricting abortion access have been passed 
throughout  Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. 
Even if the health law fell far short of what the church hoped to  achieve—
that is, ending federal support of all abortion services, requiring that  
women receive the approval of their spouses before having an abortion, and  
requiring prescriptions for the morning-after pill—it marked a decisive shift 
in  Russia’s evolving battle over reproductive rights. Just after the bill 
was  introduced in the Duma, Patriarch Kirill met with Tatyana Golikova, head 
of the  Ministry of Health, and signed an agreement of cooperation on 
future initiatives  that included combating abortion and promoting motherhood 
and 
the traditional  family. “This is not just joint projects,” Golikova said, 
“but also the solution  to the problems at the legislative level.”  
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New legislation will be high on the agenda at the WCF’s 2014 congress in  
Moscow in September. The event, titled “Every Child a Gift: Large Families—
the  Future of Humanity,” will include a special parliamentary forum 
organized by  Mizulina, who is known as “the Inquisitor” and drafted both the 
anti-abortion  and anti-gay bills. “Pro-family” MPs from Europe and around the 
world are  expected to attend. 
The Moscow summit will be held at the Congress Hall of the Kremlin and the  
Cathedral of Christ the Savior, where the punk band Pussy Riot staged its 
mock  prayer denouncing Vladimir Putin in February 2012. Putin, whose close 
ties to  the church hierarchy are well-known, said shortly after he was 
re-elected that  conflict over “cultural identity, spiritual and moral values, 
and moral codes”  will come to define Russia’s relations with other 
countries. 
Oddly, the Orthodox-evangelical alliance marks one of the few bright spots 
in  an otherwise strained relationship between the United States and Russia. 
As one  American banker in Moscow with close ties to Hilarion Alfeyev told 
me, “It is  surely one of the most positive things taking place right now 
regarding  US-Russian relations.”

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