Putin and the monk
How much influence does Father Tikhon Shevkunov have over the Russian president?
January 25, 2013 7:26 pm
By Charles Clover
Father Tikhon Shevkunov looks a little too polished to fit the image of the Orthodox Christian monk branded into the western imagination by Dostoevsky. The beard is just unkempt enough, but his chin is a bit too sculpted, his mane of shoulder-length hair too full and flowing, and his TV delivery too flawless to belong to any crazed, self-flagellating anchorite from The Brothers Karamazov. Father Tikhon is a picture of movie-star self-assurance with a passing resemblance to Russell Crowe.
While Dostoevskys monks stuck to their unheated monastic cells, Tikhon is no recluse. When I interviewed him in December, he was back from a visit to China and off soon to Latin America. The whitewashed walls and onion domes of Sretensky monastery, which he presides over in downtown Moscow, is not exactly an ecclesiastical island of contemplation, isolated from the modern world.
Call the monastery, for example, and you will get a switchboard operator. Need to use WiFi? No problem. Walk into an outbuilding and you will see the largest publishing house of the Russian Orthodox church and, since 2000, the best-known and most-used Orthodox website: Pravoslavie.ru.
At Mount Athos they only just got electricity, and at Sretensky [monastery] the monks all have iPads, laughs Yevgeny Nikiforov, a friend of Tikhons and head of Orthodox radio station Radio Radonezh, referring to the Greek monastery which is the Orthodox religions gold standard in terms of cloistered asceticism. Of course, they need these [iPads] for their proselytsing work, he says, turning serious when he sees that I am writing this down.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/f2fcba3e-65be-11e2-a3db-00144feab49a.html#axzz2J8icZ4RE