(Bloomberg) --- President Vladimir
Putin’s elevation of Crimea to the status of Russia ’s
Holy Land has prompted puzzlement and scorn
from historians and commentators.
Crimea for Russians
is “like the Temple Mount in Jerusalem ”
for Muslims and Jews, Putin said, and would be regarded this way “from now on
and forever.” Vladimir the Great was baptized in Kherson, Crimea, Putin
explained in his annual address yesterday to parliament and top officials in
Moscow, an event in 988 that is considered to be the beginning of the
Christianization of Kievan Rus, a precursor state to Russia and Ukraine.
“Prince Vladimir
was Kievan, not Muscovite, and this probably only underlines the right of Kiev and not Moscow to Crimea ,” Andrei Zubov, a Russian historian and political
scientist, said in an interview.
Putin’s new Crimea
myth added a religious aspect to Russia ’s
confrontation with the U.S.
and the European Union after it annexed the peninsula from Ukraine in
March. EU and U.S.
sanctions have helped to push the Russian economy to the brink of recession as
it wrestles with a 39 percent slump in the value of the ruble against the
dollar this year and a one-third decline in the oil price. Russia depends
on oil and gas revenue for about half of its federal budget.
Historians argue
over whether Vladimir was baptized in Vasilev,
near Kiev , rather than Kherson ,
said Zubov, who lost his post at the Moscow State Institute of International
Relations in March after he compared Putin’s takeover of Crimea to Nazi leader
Adolf Hitler’s annexation of Austria
in 1938.
‘Incorrect’
Comparison
From a religious
viewpoint “Kiev is a much more important place
for Russian Orthodox pilgrims than Crimea ,”
said Deacon Andrei Kuraev, a theologian and a popular Russian blogger. It’s
“incorrect” to compare Crimea with the Temple Mount ,
the holiest place on Earth for Jews, he said.
Putin’s comparison
of Crimea with Jerusalem is a “not very
successful move” to justify Russia ’s
actions, said Igor Danilevsky, head of historical research methods at Moscow ’s Higher School of
Economics.
“The historical
part of the speech was very strange,” Gleb Pavlovsky, a former Kremlin adviser,
said by phone. “Many Russians will be amused to hear about comparisons of
Russians with Jews and of Crimea with Jerusalem .”
Only 25 percent of Russians knew that Prince Vladimir began
the baptism of Russia
in 988, according to a 2013 poll by the Public Opinion Foundation. A survey it
conducted in May found that 31 percent of Russians have visited Crimea .
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