One of the provisions in the new religion law worrying
Baptist pastor Viktor Zdanevich lists "the attraction of minors to
religious organisations and also the teaching of religion to them against their
will or without the agreement of their parents or guardians" among
offences liable to prosecution. During the Soviet period, "some of our
pastors were imprisoned for that," he explained to Forum 18 News Service
in the south-western city of Brest on 15 September.
Zdanevich's 1000-strong congregation still meets in the church they were
permitted to build in 1982. Previously part of a larger community belonging to
the unregistered Baptist Council of Churches, he told Forum 18, the church is
colloquially known as Fortechnaya Street Baptist Church ("if it were on
Lenin Street, we'd be Lenin Street Baptist Church") and has registered -
but autonomous - status. The congregation is currently completing an adjacent
Sunday school building for 170 children, Zdanevich pointed out to Forum 18,
"but we have many more than that". Construction started in 2000, he
said, following eight years of negotiation with the local authorities.
Recent experience by communities within the Baptist Union amplify Pastor
Zdanevich's cause for concern. On 10 April the pastor of Gethsemane Baptist
Church in Minsk region reported a 7 April request from his local council in the
village of Machulishchi for a list of children attending the church's Sunday
school and the passport details of its teachers. Told that this information was
required by Minsk Regional Executive Committee, the pastor maintained that
officials refused to put the grounds for the request in writing, so he refused
to comply.
Also on 10 April, Pastor Pavel Firisyuk of Salvation Baptist Church, likewise
in Minsk region, reported a 4 April request from the secretary of his local
village council in Kolodishchi for the full names, addresses, telephone
numbers, educational qualifications and passport details of the congregation's
pastors and Sunday school teachers, as well as the full names and dates of
birth of all Sunday school pupils. Told that this information was required by
the Commission for the Affairs of Minors attached to Minsk Regional Executive
Committee, Firisyuk wrote that he gave the pastors' details but not those of
the Sunday school teachers and pupils. "We believe this to be a violation
of believers' rights," he explained, "as well as of Christ's
commandment: 'Let the little children come to me.'"
On 14 April the head of Baptist Union churches in Minsk region, Gennadi
Brutsky, wrote to the State Committee for Religious and Ethnic Affairs for
clarification of these incidents, which, he noted, had also been reported in
other localities. "We consider such actions by some public officials to be
an attempt to return our country to its totalitarian past, which is
unacceptable for a country in the process of building a democratic
society," Brutsky wrote.
Responding to Brutsky almost exactly a month later on 13 May, Committee vice-chairman
Vladimir Lameko wrote that the request for information regarding Sunday school
teachers and pupils was part of a check-up on the conformation of religious
organisations with the religion law. The vice-chairman of Minsk Regional
Executive Committee had instructed local authorities to identify cases of
religious instruction of minors without the permission of their parents or
guardians, he explained, in addition to instances of involvement by foreign
citizens in Sunday schools without corresponding authorisation.
Such a check-up is the legal obligation of all local authorities, pointed out
Lameko, adding that state departments dealing with the affairs of minors at all
levels have the right to demand of organisations such information as is necessary
for their work according to a decree issued on 27 May 1967. He also noted,
however, that in the Committee's view local authorities should inform the
leaders of religious organisations about the reasons for such check-ups, and
have accordingly been made aware of "the inadmissibility of not providing
corresponding explanations when conducting similar check-ups in future".
Lameko concludes by remarking to Brutsky that "the Committee cannot agree
with your evaluation of the actions of state departments".