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Russia Travel/Study Seminar Trip Reports

 
     
 

Faith Walk

by Gary Payton

Note: This reflection on the anniversaries of terrorist attacks was written as part of the covenant made by the participants in the travel study seminar.

You and I are in the season of anniversaries of terrorist attacks. Five years since 9/11 — attacks killing more than 3,200 people from 90 countries in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania. Two years since Beslan, Russia — attacks killing more than 340 people including 186 children. Newsmagazines, television, newspapers, even the theater box office, bring us the images and rekindle emotions once again.

It is right for us to remember. It is right for us to grieve. And, it is also right to reflect on what motivates our personal responses today as the anniversaries and memorial services unfold. [Read more]

 
     
   
 

August 11, 2006

Click here to view a photo album of the Russia Travel/Study Seminar.

View a photo album compiled by participants in the Russia travel study group.

Our travel study seminar on "Terrorism in the World Today: the Response of the Church and the State" formally ended Thursday evening with a farewell picnic that blended the best of Russian and American traditions. We shared music and song. We shared soccer, badminton, and volleyball. And, we shared Russian "shashliki" or kebobs and American "s'mores." (Getting the marshmallows, graham crackers, and chocolate bars to the other side of the planet was a feat in itself!) But before we said our "good-byes" we had two final days of discussion and reflection together.

Wednesday, our group focused on the short novel Hadji Murat by Leo Tolstoy. The novel, written between 1896 and 1904, tells the tale of a Chechen warrior caught between the clash of an expanding Russian empire and his Islamic traditions nurtured in the mountains of the North Caucasus. Hadji Murat is the story of two peoples who talk past each other, who cannot find common ground to live peaceably, and whose lives are caught up in a spiral of ever escalating violence. This hundred-year-old novel speaks to us today of the price of empire and the clash of peoples when religious extremists hold sway.

Our conversation continued with Brandon Hunt's presentation on "State-Sponsored Terrorism and State Terrorism." This controversial topic moved us beyond conversation about 9/11 and Beslan and moved us into the emotional area of violence wrought by governments or government proxies in our names. Where do such actions as the fire bombing of Dresden, the atomic blasts of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the military actions of Russian contract "soldiers" in Chechnya fall in today's understanding of terrorism?

Our seminar ended Thursday morning with a discussion of the covenant we had each entered into with each other. As with so many cross cultural groups brought together in travel study seminars, we will work hard to stay connected and to tell our stories in both Russia and America. Our last session concluded with lifting up the final paragraph of the 2004 General Assembly resolution on Violence, Religion, and Terrorism:

"...in dealing with terrorism there is a need for a heroism of patience that is just as demanding as a heroism of action, for a prudence of steadfastness that is just as important as the pursuit of expedient strategies, for a willingness to approach others in trust that is at least as important as the need to defend one's self. We are called to a discipleship that trusts God even more than to exercise a shrewdness that is founded only on what seems humanly prudent."

May the Peace of Christ be with you,
Gary Payton

 
     
   
 

August 8, 2006

Group of seminar participants sitting around a table, listening to presentations.
Participants in the travel study seminar from the United States and from Russia engage in a discussion of terrorism. Photo by Kurt Esslinger.

Our time in Russia is drawing to a close. Monday, our seminar included three very important sessions, perhaps the most important of our time together. We heard a presentation from our Russian colleague, Alexander, on Christianity, Islam and Terrorism. Our afternoon sessions included two presentations on the PC(USA) resolution of 2004 on Violence, Religion, and Terrorism (Gary) followed by a presentation by our host, Marina Shishova, on the Russian Orthodox social policy and a June 2006 statement on terrorism by an international, interfaith gathering of religious leaders in Moscow. The PC(USA) presentation included a video on our Interfaith Listening project.

Throughout, the pronouncements on terror ran parallel. The gravity of terror was brought home dramatically with a Russian video on Chechnya and the heroic efforts of one priest, Father Anatoli, in particular.

Today (Tuesday), we changed the pace for the entire seminar by touring the Museum of the Siege of Leningrad and the historic palace and grounds of Peter the Great, Peterhof. The violence of war cannot be made clearer than through a visit to the museum remembering the 900-day siege from 1941 to 1944. We each departed thinking of Israel/Lebanon and Iraq and the plight of innocents in time of war.

We have become close friends with our Russian Orthodox partners. Sharing meals, talking together, playing with and holding the six-month-old son of two of our participants, have all served to build bridges and create understanding.

As I tell all the groups which visit, "No, we are not all alike. But we share many, many things together each as children of God." Russia has been shaped by historical and cultural forces that are very different from American. Wisdom comes when we know these things and still seek the common humanity we do share.

Yours in Christ,
Gary

 
     
   
 

August 5, 2006

We have completed two full days of our seminar here in St. Petersburg. Our Russian young adult partners are a fine and engaged group: a young adult deacon in the Old Believer's Orthodox Church, his wife; a nationally known singer who is a psychologist; a psychologist student in university, and a young man who aspires to be a priest. We are led ably by our PC(USA) partners at the Interchurch Partnership, Father Vladimir Federov, Marina Shishova, and Yaroslav Morozov (the young deacon).

Our ice breakers on the first day were very interesting. After exchaning brief bio information and pictures, we talked about "Russian Stereotypes of Americans" and "American Stereotypes of Russians." A very good exercise. We have continued this Saturday with reports and conversation on the history of terrorism in Russia and in the United States. We concluded with a wide-ranging discussion of the definition of terrorism, guided by the 2004 GA resolution on Violence, Religion, and Terrorism — made available in Russian and in English.

Yesterday, we began our time together with a reading of a Psalm of assurance. Today, fitting the topic, we moved into a reading of a Psalm of lament. It set the move to discuss terror, but to be lifted up in the love of God in the final verses.

Tomorrow, we worship in a Russian Orthodox Church with the liturgy led by our friend Father Vladimir. Then, we visit the Leyse Peace Park, a place where the artifacts of the 900 day siege of Leningrad in World War II are still being unearthed: helmets, bayonets, shells, and bones. It will be a very sobering visit. We conclude our evening at the home of Garth and Lyuda Moller, mission coworkers here in Peter whose ministry is a Christian School, grades K to 11 — the full school program in Russia.

Thank you for your prayers. Lives are being changed in this seminar and understanding increased daily.

Yours in Christ,
Gary

 
     
   
 

Exploring the Impact of Terror • August 4, 2006

We arrived safely this morning in St. Petersburg. Our last day in Moscow was full and important. We visited the terrorist attack sites at the Nord Ost Theater and the Puskinskaya metro station. Our afternoon included an important 2 hour conversation about Beslan with Baptist, Orthodox, Anglican and Presbyterian participants.

Today, we arrived in St. Petersburg and have been warmly greeted by our Interchurch Partnership partners. Our morning included an introduction to the Partnership. And, this afternoon we have been introducing ourselves and our work. Tonight, we have a big dinner — 10 people, Russians and Americans.

We are off to a very good start. More soon.

In Christ,
Gary Payton

 
     
   
 

Arrival in Moscow • August 2, 2006

We arrived safely in Moscow on Tuesday afternoon after an uneventful, long flight from Chicago and Frankfurt. Checked into our Hotel Warsaw in downtown Moscow, showered, and headed out to explore the Arbat section of the city. We really wanted to stay awake and the best way was to stroll. We enjoyed a dinner in a shaskik restaurant specializing in Caucasus/Central Asian food. Our highlights were an evening of ice cream and conversation with Ellen Smith, a PC(USA) mission coworker here in Moscow. She planted many seeds among the group for future work with children in orphanages or children with Downes. We concluded the evening with a quiet Lexio reflection on a psalm and on our upcoming encounter with the violence of terrorism.

Today is a day of simple orientation and of adjusting our body clocks from the 11-hour time difference from the west coast. We will visit the Kremlin to understand Russian power, the relationship of church and state under the czars, and then spend time at Christ the Savior cathedral of the Orthodox Church. Our evening will conclude with dinner with a young Russian woman who is studying at a theological institute and who is deeply involved in the humanitarian work of Sant Egidio, an ecumenical peace community of the Catholic Church, but with chapters worldwide. We will end our day with a Lexio on Beslan and a psalm of lament.

We are well. Temps are good in the 70s. And, we are filled with energy and a wonderful cooperative spirit.

Reporting for our Travel Study Seminar.

Yours in Christ,
Gary Payton

 
         
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