Vaterlaus, Melissa.  A Practical Guide to Real Life in Moscow.  Moscow:  Triad Christian Mission, 1993.  160 pp. $10.

This comprehensive, no-nonsense manual for Western newcomers to Moscow will pay for itself many times over through its detailed and savvy treatment of all manner of critical concerns:  entry issues, packing, appliances, transportation, shopping, cooking, security, communications (mail, telephone, fax), money, health care, and Christian literature sources.

Sample several examples of the author's hard-won advice:

  • apartment balconies make fine open-air freezers six months a year--providing one takes precautions against large Russian ravens;
  • pack fabric window screening for the summer since air conditioning and screens are rare, but mosquitos are not;
  • the author's first two titles for recommended reading would be this reviewer's first choices as well:  Yale Richmond's From Nyet to Da:  Understanding the Russians and Ray and Cindy LeClair's Handbook for Christian Travelers to the CIS.  (See EWC&M Report 1 (Winter 1993), 13, and (Fall 1993), 12, for descriptions and order information.)

An unavoidable predicament for Real Life stems from the current pace of change in Moscow.  While cost information already dates the book, quoted prices still can serve as comparative benchmarks.  And while the book's 35-page directory will deservedly become dog-eared, the monthly Moscow Tribune "Telephone Book" insert could serve as a helpful supplement.  One also could wish for less of an American frame of reference.

The one truly troubling feature of the guide is its frequently  negative tone regarding almost all things Russian.  Moscow natives, if they happen across the volume, likely will find its bite and edge offensive:

  • "It is a common practice here to take advantage of foreigners" (p. 82).  I certainly would not deny this.  But this fact needs to be balanced by noting that many Russians show many foreigners acts of kindness and that many foreigners take or try to take advantage of many Russians.
  • "You will be one of the few if you don't have days when you think you're losing your mind"  (p. 106).  Also true enough.  But not a few long-term Westerners in Moscow would balance this dreary assessment with the Russian capital's fascination and feistiness, its rich history, and yes, so far, its often fulsome friendliness towards strangers in its midst.
  • With an expatriate fumbling for the correct currency, Russian clerks certainly are capable of thinking, or saying, "Oh great, another idiot foreigner" (p. 61).  But while taking such a tack in depicting Muscovites might be understood as playful and lighthearted lambasting in small doses, the fact that Real Life maintains a caustic, us-and-them tenor throughout, makes one wonder if the author has not experienced some degree of cross-cultural burnout.

Ironically, Vaterlaus not only notes but appears also to serve as an illustration of the toll that the wear and tear of Russian daily life can have on foreign as well as native residents. Tenor aside, Westerners in Moscow definitely will be well served by this truly indispensable guide.

$10 plus $3 shipping/handling from the Institute for East-West Christian Studies, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL 60187-5593; tel:  708-752-5917; fax:  708-752-5555.  (Illinois residents add $0.68 per book sales tax.  International shipping is by book rate.  Visa and MasterCard are accepted.) Copies may be obtained from the Christian Resource Center for $12.50 each (Box 115, Moscow, Russia 117311; tel/fax:  7095-939-0641; fax:  7095-437-6296 or 7503-956-5022).  CRC cannot accept checks.

Reviewed by Mark Elliott, editor.

New "Credo" Documentaries Worth the Watch

Five of ten 1992-93 video documentaries on religion in Europe, released by Films for the Humanities and Sciences, treat East Central Europe and the former Soviet Union:  "Russian and Ukrainian Jews," "The Russian Orthodox Church," "The Catholic Church in Poland," "Muslims in Bulgaria," and "The Hungarian Reformed Church."

Each of these 30-minute, color, British productions features memorable photography and background music.  The films also provide sufficient historical background for the average viewer to make sense of contemporary developments, which is the focal point of each documentary.  The emphasis upon very recent issues?such as 1992-93 Polish controversies over abortion and religious education in schools, or the 1992 relegalization of Turkish-language instruction in Bulgaria?gives the documentaries immediate relevance, but probably also doom them to rapid dating.

The films can be revealing:

  • Only 12 percent of Hungarian Reformed attend church regularly and more live outside than inside Hungary; and
  • Orthodox Metropolitan Pitirim was surprisingly vitriolic on camera toward Catholics and Protestants, their activities in Russia being characterized as "criminal, immoral, and sinful."

And moving:

  • the treatment of the martyrdom of Polish Catholic Father Jerzy Popieluszko; and
  • the morally searching words of Bishop Laszlo Tokes to a Hungarian Reformed World Conference.  (See following excerpt.)

On the downside, the pace sometimes drags, especially in "Russian and Ukrainian Jews" and in "The Hungarian Reformed Church."  And errors do occur:  the estimate of four to six million Russian and Ukrainian Jews is at least two to three times too high.  Fortunately, such miscues are rare.

Probably the worst that can be said, and it is a mild reservation, is that much of East European religious life did not make it into view:   Eastern Orthodoxy and Judaism in the former Soviet Bloc, Catholicism outside Poland and Russia, and Protestantism outside Hungary.

Still, it is fair to say that the Credo series easily is the most accurate, up-to-date, and wide-ranging documentary treatment of religion in Eastern Europe available in English.

For purchase or rentals contact:

Films for the Humanities and Sciences
Box 2053
Princeton, NJ 08543-2053
Tel:  800-257-5126
Fax:  609-275-3767

 Videos cost $149 each, plus 5% for shipping/handling.  Rentals run $75, plus $7.45 shipping/handling each.

Bishop Lazlo Tokes on Spiritual Loss and Spiritual Gain

Speaking to the Hungarian Reformed World Conference
 
People used to say, "they took our faith away and put nothing in its place."  This statement has become a cliche.  But if we think about it, it is truer today than ever.  They robbed us and destroyed our lives, society, churches, and nation.  The Turks killed us bodily and the Hapsburgs tormented our souls, but the Communists destroyed both body and soul.

It would have been bad enough if they had merely taken our possessions, our property, and our land.  But following a carefully planned strategy, they took our faith, our rights, our freedom, and our churches.  They seized our culture and traditions.  Then came the persecution, with the most tragic consequences.  They wanted to deprive us of God and alienate us from other people.  It was like taking an ax and chopping at the roots of our communities.

But we too were to blame.  Our silence made us accomplices in this crime.  As victims, we played into the hands of our persecutors.  Servility and resignation made us sinners.  So how do we respond to this?  As Reformists we can answer this with a truly Reformist saying, "If God is with us, who can be against us?"  Those who love God will come to no harm.  That is the answer of the Word, an answer based on faith.  The Reformist response is sola fide, by faith alone.  The name Reformist explains the meaning and purpose of our religion.  The Reformist faith reflects our return to the Scriptures.  The catechism states that Holy Scripture is the only true measure of our faith and our lives.

Source:  Credo:  The Hungarian Reformed Church (1993).  See preceding video review.

Seymore, Bruce II, ed.  The Access Guide to Ethnic Conflicts in Europe and the Former Soviet Union.  Washington, DC:  Access, 1994.  168 pp. $19.95, plus $3 shipping/handling.

Contents:  an informed, concise, and readable introductory essay by veteran scholar Paul Goble; a serviceable bibliography (8 pp.); well-balanced, succinct profiles of ethnic conflicts, including 14 pages on the former Yugoslavia and 18 pages on the former Soviet Union; a glossary (5 pp.); excerpts from international human-rights accords (9 pp.); a directory of relevant academic, peace and conflict resolution, and ethnic and human-rights programs and organizations (58 pp.); and a brief but invaluable, annotated survey of computer, educational, and curricular resources (3 pp).

Surprisingly, religion gets short shrift in the resources and directory sections despite its centrality to most European ethnic disputes.  Compensate at this point with the East-West Christian Organizations Directory, highlighted in the EWC&M Report 1 (Winter 1993), 3.  Still, The Access Guide to Ethnic Conflicts provides a neat and tidy introduction to a subject that is anything but.  To order contact:  Access, 1730 M Street NW, Suite 605, Washington, DC 20036; tel:  202-783-6050; fax:  202-783-4767.
 

The East-West Christian Organizations Directory, now published in the Russian language, includes over 674 agencies working in East Central Europe and the former Soviet Union.  Copies available for $2 from the Christian Resource Center, Box 115, Moscow, Russia 117311; tel/fax:  7095-939-0641; fax:  7095-437-6296 or 7503-956-5022.  CRC cannot accept checks.  The English edition ($15) may be ordered from Berry Publishing Services, Inc., 701 Main St., Evanston, IL 60202; tel:  708-869-1573; 800-274-9447; fax:  708-869-4825; and the Institute for East-West Christian Studies, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL 60187; tel:  708-752-5917; fax:  708-752-5555 ($15 plus $3 shipping/handling; Illinois residents must add $1.01 sales tax).

Nonprofit Alert, a legal information service of the law firm of Gammon & Grange, is making English-language documentation available on 1993 threats to Russian freedom of religion. The 17-page Proposed Changes to Russian Federation Law on Freedom of Religion Commentary ($75)  provides detailed analysis of legislative history, existing law, previously proposed changes, and projected consequences for foreign organizations. Proposed Changes to Russian Federation Law on Freedom of Religion--Documents ($50) contains translations of seven documents, including existing and draft laws and implementing decrees. A strong likelihood exists that Russia's new Parliament will debate new attempts to restrict the 1990 law on freedom of religion. For that reason, these Nonprofit Alert publications retain far more than merely historic interest.
Contact:

Nonprofit Alert, Gammon & Grange
8280 Greensboro Dr.,
7th Floor
McLean, VA 22102
Tel: 703-761-5000;
Fax: 703-761-5023

Pravoslavnaya Moskva, spravochnik deistvuyushchikh monastyrei i khramov (Orthodox Moscow, a Reference Book of Active Monasteries and Churches), published by Moscow's Brotherhood of St. Tikhon in 1993, profiles working monasteries and churches, their history, current programs, hours of services, parish priests, addresses, and telephones. This practical, 224-page directory includes over 100 churches reopened in 1990-92.

Interactive computer software now makes it possible to take simulated, self-guided tours of renowned Russian museums, galleries, and historical landmarks. Cascade Marketing International is developing a series of Russian-English interactive programs for IBM and IBM-compatible personal computers. "Lavra" ($89.95), for example, explores the art and architecture of the celebrated Holy Trinity Saint Sergius Monastery in a way that is both instructive and entertaining. Also available is Volume 1 ($129.95) of a planned five-volume Hermitage Museum series.
Contact:

Cascade Marketing International
115 E. School Rd.
Wenatchee, WA 98801
Tel: 800-892-3338;
Fax: 509-664-7398

The new address for Russian Christian Publishing is Box 1, Partridge, KS 67566; tel: 316-567-3222; fax: 316-567-3122. RCP Director David Wagler provides translation services and Christian literature in Russian, Ukrainian, Georgian, Romanian, and Albanian.

A Third Catalogue of Literature and Resources for Russian Jewish Evangelism profiles materials designed for ministry to Russian Jews. Sections on video, music, tapes, books, periodicals, and Bibles and New Testaments provide descriptions, costs, and ordering information.
Contact:

Dr. James Melnick
Friends of Soviet Jewry
Box 2567
Springfield, VA 22152

Health Information for International Travel, a physician's handbook written in layman's language, outlines foreign countries' entry requirements and innoculation recommendations. This U.S. Center for Disease Control paperback is available for $6.50. Request H.H.S. publication C.D.C. 93-8280, code 017-023-00192-9 from the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, DC 20402; tel: 202-782-3238.

Slavic Christian Publishers offers Russian and Ukrainian publication services, including translation, editing, and distribution. SCP networks with Slavic bookstores worldwide and maintains literature warehouses in the former Soviet Union.
Contact:

Vitaly Michka, Executive Director
Slavic Christian Publishing
Box 2845
Broken Arrow, OK 74013
Tel: 918-437-3656;
Fax: 918-437-3622

  Resources, East-West Church & Ministry Report, 2 (Winter 1994), 12-13.

Written permission is required for reprinting or electronic distribution of any portion of the East-West Church & Ministry Report.

© 1994 Institute for East-West Christian Studies
ISSN 1069-5664

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