What went wrong?: Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine
"The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 ushered in a tumultuous period for Russia and Ukraine. The Soviet Union broke apart, Communism was exposed as morally bankrupt, and Russian leaders turned to the West for help. In an astonishing development, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin invited a grou...
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Sprache: | English |
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Eugene, Oregon
Cascade Books
[2024]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Zusammenfassung: | "The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 ushered in a tumultuous period for Russia and Ukraine. The Soviet Union broke apart, Communism was exposed as morally bankrupt, and Russian leaders turned to the West for help. In an astonishing development, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin invited a group of American evangelicals to give advice on restoring morality to Russia. The nation was moving toward democratic and religious freedoms until, one decade later, Vladimir Putin abruptly reversed course. He labeled most religious organizations as "foreign agents" and set in motion an aggressive plan to restore the pride of the "Russian world." Putin's alliance with the Russian Orthodox Church, and his hostility to true democracy, led to the brutal invasion of Ukraine, which had opted for freedom and democracy. Other books have analyzed the economic and social dynamics in Russia and Ukraine after 1991. This one chronicles a previously untold story: the role religion played in the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the rise of a newly autocratic Russia, and the emergence of democracy in Ukraine. What lay behind the radically different paths chosen by two former Soviet republics?" -- Publisher's description |
Beschreibung: | Enthält als Kapitel 2 bis 11 Reprint von Philip Yancey: "Praying with the KGB" (1991) |
Beschreibung: | viii, 182 Seiten Illustrationen 23 cm |
ISBN: | 9781666747973 9781666747980 |
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Contents Preface | vii Part One: The Cold War Thaws Chapter i: A Gust of Hope | 3 Part Two: Visit to a Shattered Empire Chapter 2: Invitation to a Revolution | 11 Chapter 3: Rumblings from a Volcano | 15 Chapter 4: Church Bells in the Kremlin | 19 Chapter 5: Praying with the KGB | 25 Chapter 6: Basil and the Journalists | 32 Chapter 7: Interlude in Zagorsk | 39 Chapter 8: Man of the Decade | 48 Chapter 9: Fall from Grace | 54 Chapter 10: The Last Marxist in Moscow | 60 Chapter 11: Awakenings | 66 Part Three: Russia’s U-Turn and Ukraine’s Rebirth Chapter 12: The Light That Dimmed | 77 Chapter 13: After the Fall | 80 Chapter 14: Putin’s Ascent | 86 Chapter 15: Church and State | 92 Chapter 16: A Painful Past | 99 Chapter 17: Invasion | 105 Chapter 18: Dirty War | 113 Chapter 19: Holy War | 121
Part Four: Lessons Learned Chapter 20: Culture Counts | 131 Chapter 21: “Who Are We?” | 138 Chapter 22: The Threat of Autocracy | 144 Chapter 23: Baptizing Caesar | 153 Chapter 24: What Went Right with Ukraine? | 159 Afterword: The Future for Ukraine and Russia | 165 Appendix: Project Christian Bridge | 171 Subject Index | 175
Subject Index Academy of Social Sciences, 60-65 aggressions, Putin needing, 148,169 Aker, John, 21-22, 29 Andropov, Yuri, 3 anomie, 138,139 Applebaum, Anne, 108,144, 145 assassinations, under Putins supervi sion, 89 atheism, 20, 64, 133, 154, 155, 156 atrocities, 118,141,160 August coup, 52, 55 autocracy, 144-52,170 autocrats, 107,144,146, 168 awakening, signs of (photo), 74 “Christian America,” US speeches about, 158 Christian Bridge. See Project Christian Bridge Christian educators, delegation to the Soviet Union, 80 Christian liberal arts college, in Mos cow, 79 Christian ministries, operating out of Irpin, 113 churches response of Ukrainian, 122 Russian unprepared for societal changes, 156 Churchill, Winston, 35-36, 108 Cold War, 3, 5, 77, 78,133,170 CoMission, 82, 85 communism, vii, 12, 48, 131, 156 Communist Party ban on provoked no violent protest, 165 leaders never apologized, 157 model of a socialist society, 139 monopoly on power, 5 reaching out to evangelical Christi anity, 55 Russian Orthodox Church and, 39-40,153 in Ukraine, 100 Yeltsin resigned from, 6 corruption, of Yeltsins government, 96,137 courage, as infectious, 108 Crimea, 103,162 cultural genocide, 118-19,141,142 Babi Yar, 100 Baltic states, 151-52,169 Basil, 33-35, 38, 70, 72 Berlin Wall, fall of, 133 Bernbaum, John, 79 Bibles, distribution of, 21 Biden, Joe, 149 Bolsheviks, 153,165 Brother Bonifato, 41, 43, 44, 46 Brezhnev, Leonid, 3, 50 “Brezhnev Doctrine,” repudiation of, 5 Bucha, 114,115,116,118,126 Bulgakov, Mikhail, 133-34,155 Bush, George H. W., 5, 21, 77 Bush, George W, 87, 93 Campus
Crusade for Christ (CRU), 33 82 capitalism, 59, 62, 83 VS
Subject Index culture ignoring underlying, 131 of Ukraine, 160 “culture war,” 93 “failed states,” allowing countries to become, 145 famine, in 1931-1933,160 Famine Museum, in Kyiv, 99 foreign news sources, blocked by Rus sia, 119 foreign policies, Gorbachev’s shift in, 5 “forever war,” Putin’s attack on Ukraine, 150 free market economy, 4,160 freedom, 17-18, 62, 87,147,172 Freedom of Conscience Law, 20П1 “frozen conflict,” 150,169 FSB (Federal Security Service), 89 Declaration of Independence (U.S.), 134 democracy battle between autocracy and, 144 built on principles of human dignity, 36 converting a top-down system to, 160 as a dirty word, 85 needing a culture of integrity, trust, and openness, 135,137 needing profound and systemic reform, 51 Putin never had any intent to build, 91 Putin reversing, 96 relationship with religion, 23 in Ukraine, 100,166 "denazifying,” Ukraine, 120 Deyenka, Peter and Anita, 28, 74 dissent, Kremlin cracking down on, 89 Dmytruk, Natalia, 101 Dobson, James, 32 Dostoevsky, Fyodor, 43, 48, 58, 60, 64, 67, 78, 155 double-talk, 95 Dzerzhinsky, Feliks, 25, 26 General Secretaries, of the Communist Party, 3, 4 genocide, on a massive scale, 118 glasnost (openness), 4, 49? global politics, new threat in, 144 God, going where he is wanted, 70 “Godless shock brigades,” 20 goodness, Russians lacking motivation for, 58 Gorbachev, Mikhail asked for help to restore morality, vii aura of fame of, 53 coup against, 6 domestic policies of, 165 drawing comfort from the Bible, 51 edged away from rigid Marxism, 54-55 granted full religious freedom, 52, 154 invited
the Christian Bridge delega tion, 13, 78 meeting(s) with, 7,14, 50, 52 new era of change, 4 new style of, 49 orchestrating a revolution, 77 photo, 73, 74 presidential decrees, 20 radical changes in the Soviet Union, 80,159 reasons for his “new thinking,” 131-32 recognized contributions of Chris tians, 155 Eberstadt, Nicholas, 169 economic downturns, in Russia, 95 empires, Ukraine ruled by competing, 141 energetic leadership, of Putin, 140 energy infrastructure, Russia’s assault on, 118 energy sector, Putins attack on Ukraine’s, 149 energy superpower, Russia as, 149 ethnic groups, in Russian Federation, 169 ethnic minorities, in Russia, 168 ethnic Russians, in Ukraine, 112 exodus of citizens, from Russia, 120 176
Subject Index rescue of, 27 resolve to end persecution of Chris tians, 5 on Russia’s past failures, 154 Soviet cynicism about, 49 Gorbachev, Raisa, 14, 51, 60 Gorky Academic Choir, concert by, 81 Graham, Billy, visit to Moscow, 35 grief, breaking through, 125 Patriarch Kirill, 92, 93, 94,104,121-22 knowledge economy, of Russia, 169 The Knowledge Society, 20 Kremlin, 24, 89, 94,119,155 Kyiv, 99,106. See also Kiev Law on Freedom of Conscience, 154-55 League of Militant Atheists, 20 Lenin, Vladimir, 48, 50, 57,154 Leonovich, Alex, 21, 30-31, 34, 35, 72 life expectancy, for Russian males, 84 lines of people, at every storefront, 16 little green men, in Crimea, 103,162 loyalists, chosen by Putin, 146 Lubenchenko, Konstantin, 21, 51, 71 Lubyanka prison, 26 health care facilities, Russian attacks on, 110 “Heavenly Hundred,” memorials to, 102,161,162 Hill, Fiona, 86 imitation democracy, 159,166 “Independence Generation,” in Russia, 143 Independence Square (Maidan), 101, 102,161 infrastructure (Ukrainian), 112,167 Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD), 63-65 Irpin, 113,114 Irpin Bible Church, 122 Ivan, the agnostic, 64-65 Izium, war crimes in, 118 Izvestiya, 31, 55 Maidan Uprising. See Revolution of Dignity Malaysian Airlines flight, downed by Russians, 162 Mariupol, destruction of, 117 Marx, Karl, 50, 57, 69 Marxism-Leninism, viii, 69,132,134, 144 Master and Margarita, The (Bulgakov), 133-34 material possessions, feverish pursuit of, 156 McFaul, Michael, 150 McIntire, Carl, 11,12 media companies, autocrats buying, 144-45 Medvedev, Dmitry, 89 military and security forces,
Putin’s control of all, 148 ministry of presence, 124,126 Minsk I and Minsk II, 163 Mission Eurasia, 113,114 missionaries, 82, 85 mono-religious culture, of the Russian world, 157 moral foundation, seeking, 13, 82 moral life, rebuilding Soviet, 132 “moral revolution,” in Russia, 135 morale, Ukrainian forces having a clear advantage of, 110 “Jesus Film,” in the Soviet Union, 82 Pope John Paul II, 40,133 Joni and Friends, evacuated Ukraini ans, 124 Journalists’ Club of Moscow, visit to, 35-38 Kakhovka dam, demolished by Rus sians, 119 KGB (now FSB), 26, 28,147 Kharkiv, Ukraine’s surprise attack on, 111 Kherson, Russian humiliation in, 111 Khrushchev, Nikita, 3,11, 50 Kiev. See also Kyiv as the mother of all Russian cities, 121 King, Martin Luther, Jr., 158 177
Subject Index morality, 56,132 Morgulis, Mikhail, 13, 21, 23 on the existence of God, 52 on the newscaster, 37 photo, 71 prayer in KGB meeting, 31 response to Gorbachev, 51-52 partnerstvo, with the United States, 6 perestroika, 4,49, 78, 81,132 perfect equality, of Soviet communism, 16 persecution, of Christians, 156 “personalist autocracy,” Putins Russia as a, 145 personalist autocrats, replaced by auto cratic successors, 150 Peter the Great, 136,142,153 Polanski, Dmitri, Russia’s deputy am bassador to the UN, 105 police academy, bribing your way into, 96 political opinions, Ukrainians express ing openly, 99 political prisoners, released by Gor bachev, 4 populism, of autocrats, 144 “porcupine state,” converting Ukraine into, 167 power, preventing a transfer of, 145 Pravda, meeting with editors of, 54-59 prayer, with Gorbachev, 52 Presidential Prayer Breakfast, 21 Prigozhin, Yevgeny, 146 Prison fellowship, possibility of, 45 private property, no such thing as, 68 privatized religion, not acceptable to Christians, 158 Project Christian Bridge, 12-13, 171-72 Gorbachev impressed with, 53 report on, 77 trip by, 137 “psychology of persecution,” 156 Putin, Vladimir acknowledged the failure of com munism, 140 aligning with Orthodox Church’s positions, 93,157 arresting protestors against the war, 119-20,147 ascent of, 86-91 attacks against Ukrainian infrastruc ture, 112 brought stability at a cost, viii national chaos, under Yeltsin, 96 national identity, confusion in Russia over, 139 national security establishment, en larged by Putin, 147 nationalist movement, in Russia,
85 NATO, 106,109,149,166-67 Navalny, Alexei, 89 Nederhood, Joel, 28, 51-52, 69-70 New Socialist Man, 57, 69 news sources, Putins control over, 166 NGOs (Non-Governmental Organiza tions), 88 Tsar Nicholas 1,157 Nikkei, Ron, 35 asking a prayer for the prisoners, 46 on Basil, 33 on cooperation with the Orthodox, 40 on Zagorsk prison, 43 Brother Nikodim, 43, 44 Nizhny Novgorod State University (NNSU), visit to, 80 Nobel Peace Prize, Gorbachev awarded, 49 Novorossiya (New Russia), 167 nuclear capability, of Russia, 169-70 nuclear weapons, Ukraine surrendered, 100 Nunn, Sam, 133 Obama, Barak, 89 October 1917 revolution, 165 oligarchs (Russian), 84,147-48 oligarchs (Ukrainian), 161 “On Combating Terrorism” law, 94 oppression, pattern of under Putin, 90 Orange Revolution, 101,102-3,161 Orthodoxy, as a cultural identification for Russians, 157 178
Subject Index claiming baptism as a child, 93 as a demon from hell, 115 early life as a tough hoodlum, 86 intervening in Ukraine’s political life, 160-61 invasion of Ukraine, 78,143,151 making decisions alone or with a small group, 145 miscalculations in planning, 107 offering oligarchs financial help, 148 Orange Revolution and, 102-3 rebuilding a centralized Russian state, 137,146,147 restoration of Orthodox churches, 92 resurrecting the policies of the Ro manov tsars, 142 reviving the grand dream of a Rus sian world, 94-95 setting the rules of engagement in Ukraine, 110 slammed shut the window for spiri tual help, 79 sought to dismantle the international order, 144 on Ukraine having no right to exist, 117 religious faith, not dying out in the Soviet Union, 133 repentance of the KGB, 28 “suppression of the Russian spirit” and, 135-36 Repentance (Tengiz Abuladze), 28,134 repression, autocrats handling, 146 Revolution of Dignity, 102,103,140, 162 Romanov dynasty of Russia, 142,153 Roosevelt, Franklin D., 108 ruble, free fall of, 17 Russia accused Ukraine of staging the Bu cha massacre, 115-16 ambitions not reflecting reality, 168-69 deep mood of dissatisfaction, 138 defeating militarily, 150 future of, 168-70 justification for the war, 120 as the largest country on earth, 81 seeking to control other countries in the region, 151 Russian Armed Forces, cathedral of, 94 Russian bear, looking for something to bite, 91 Russian Bible Society, reopening of, 52 Russian Civil War, massive loss of lives, 160 Russian empire, 118,168 Russian Federation, illustrating Russia’s
uniqueness, 139 Russian flag, replacing the red Soviet flag, 49 Russian forces attached Ukraine from three direc tions, 105 no strategic plan for occupying Ukraine, 107 Russian leaders campaign against God and religion, 20 seeing religion as a healing solution, Rakhuba, Sergey, heading Mission Eurasia, 113 Reagan, Ronald, 5 refugees, Europe opened its arms to receive, 109 religion freedom of, 64, 94,155, 159,163-64, 172 holding little interest for secular scholars, 131 newfound interest in, 15 5 official in Russia, 157 as “the opium of the people,” 154 resurgence of in the former USSR, 82 role in returning to elementary moral values, 132 symbolism of, 154 religious communities, cooperation in Russia, 97 137 Russian leaders (continued) on the true character of faith, 155 179
Subject Index Russian Orthodox Church dissidents within welcomed open ness, 93 as dominant state-supported reli gion, 157 giving a sense of stability and per manence, 43 history of as blood-soaked ground, 159-60 KGB’s close relationship with, 29 in the Lubyanka prison building, 47,122 making God approachable, 46 on the Putin era a “miracle of God,” 92 Putin relying on support from, 92 role of, 153 as a substitute state ideology, 93 Russian parliament, passed legislation to annex Crimea, 103,162 Russian speakers in Ukraine, protect ing the rights of, 148 Russian White House, shelled by tanks, 84-85 Russian world, dream of, 94 Russian-American Christian University (RACU), 79, 95, 96-97 Russians anti-Ukraine under Putin, 140 autocrats and, 160 battling each other over power and money, 85 blaming others for their troubles, 136 fleeing to places like Turkey and Finland, 120 as the largest ethnic minority in Ukraine, 99 living in a very repressive environ ment, 147 national reputation faded under Yeltsin, 83 not feeling accepted in traditional churches, 156 viewing the outside world as an enemy, 104 “Russia’s soul,” Yeltsin’s public search for, 138-39 Russification, revived yet again under the Soviet Union, 142 Russkiy mir, elements of, 94 Sakharov, Andrei, 26, 27 Sasha, visiting the Zagorsk prison, 40-41 “Savior Gate,” in the Kremlin wall, 24 scandals, plagued Yeltsin’s administra tion, 84 secular state, USSR founded as, 154 security, layers of protecting Putin, 150 SergeyS., 113,115 Father Sergy, preserved body of, 48 Shevardnadze, Eduard, 5 Snyder, Timothy, 160 Sochi
Olympics, 90,103 social engineering, as the wave of the future, 139-40 social justice, consistent implementa tion of, 132 Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr, 12, 32, 39 on absolute power of Soviet leaders, 48-49 on Christianity, 82 on the disasters that had befallen Russia? 69 estimated sixty million Russians died at the hands of their own govern ment, 153 on “the gulag archipelago,” 26 as an honored citizen, 17-18 reading Dostoyevsky, 65 on repentance, 135-36 as a source of spirituality, 155 on Soviet communism, 78 strip search of, 27 on tyranny, 67 Soviet communists, invited Christian leaders from the United States, viii Soviet Union. See also USSR chaos in, 19 moved away from atheism, 32 signs of awakening in, 67 tried to be “good” without God, 58 “special military operation,” 119 spiritual revival, not occurring in Rus sia, 156-57 180
Subject Index viewed as the “Bible Belt” in the Soviet Union, 97 Ukraine Evangelical Theological Semi nary, 122-23 Ukraine Without Orphans (UWO), 123 Ukrainian Catholic University, 123 Ukrainian Evangelical Theological Society, 116 Ukrainian Orthodox Church, 97, 157-58 Ukrainians dynamic change after 2016,143 fierce streak of don’t-tread-on-me independence, 99 forcibly deported to Russia or Be larus, 119 heroic resistance of, 149 protecting the sovereignty of their country, 142-43 valued freedom and individualism, 160 United States, 22,134,151,167,170 unity, sense of among Ukrainians, 162 “universal values” of the West, Putin rejecting, 90 “unvangelism” campaigns, stamping out all religious belief, 20 USSR, 7,14, 77, 81. See also Soviet Union spiritual values, Gorbachev on the need for, 132 Stalin, Joseph, 3,49, 50,134,142,153 state institutions, planting seeds of distrust in, 145 Stolyarov, Nikolai, 27-31,137 photo, 71 Sudden Russian Death Syndrome, 90 Supreme Soviet, meeting with, 19-24 teachers, Russian appealed for help, 82 tension, autocrats managing, 146 “This is Russia” phrase, 95 Tolstoy, Leo, 78,155 train transport, free for refugees from Ukraine, 109 triumphalism, West responding with a spirit of, 83 Trotsky, Leon, 57 Trump, Donald, 90 tyranny, as a habit in Russia, 67 Ukraine David-vs.-Goliath stance of, 109 deepening political and economic ties with the West, 104 defending itself against an unpro voked Russian invasion, 151 escape from the shackles of com munism, 160 fought fiercely for democracy, 131 as free and democratic, 146 future of, 166-68 history and
culture different from Russia’s, 141 invasion of as not a new war, 166 meaning borderland, 141 more Orthodox churches than Rus sia, 97 provided weapons to civilians, 149 Putin obsessed over, 140 Putin ordered military action against, 103 religious leaders of, 98 spirit of independence and freedom, Van Diest, John, photo, 74 Vladimir the Great, 42,121 “Voice of America,” news item about Christian Bridge on, 33 Volf, Miroslav, 126 war crimes, catalog of possible Russian, 118-19 wars of choice, 140,148,151 “We Shall Overcome,” sang in English, 6 "Who are we?” core identity of Russia and Ukraine, 138,143 Yahidne (north of Kyiv), war crime in, 116 Yancey, Philip, 74, 77 134 143 tilt toward Europe fed Russian para noia, 103,120 181
Subject Index Yashin, Ilya, 119 Yeltsin, Boris attacked the Russian White House, 156,166 banned Communist Party activities from Russian soil, 68-69 called on the people to defend de mocracy, 6 content to let the Soviet Union unravel, 81 cuts to government spending and ending price controls, 83-84 finding a successor, 86 forced Gorbachev to resign, 163,165 identified with the forces of demo cratic change, 6 invitation to Project Christian Bridge, vii, 13 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek 182 München lost moral legitimacy, 85 meeting with, 7 no plan for building a new system of governance, 83,137 presidential decrees, 20 proposed a search for Russia’s soul, 138-39 shut down Pravda, 5 5 started a war in Chechnya, 95 tried to dissolve parliament, 84 as a tyrant, 67 Yushchenko, Viktor, 100-101 Zagorsk Monastery, 40,41-43, 73 Zagorsk Prison, 40,43-46 Zelensky, Volodymyr, 108,119,120, 163 |
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The Soviet Union broke apart, Communism was exposed as morally bankrupt, and Russian leaders turned to the West for help. In an astonishing development, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin invited a group of American evangelicals to give advice on restoring morality to Russia. The nation was moving toward democratic and religious freedoms until, one decade later, Vladimir Putin abruptly reversed course. He labeled most religious organizations as "foreign agents" and set in motion an aggressive plan to restore the pride of the "Russian world." Putin's alliance with the Russian Orthodox Church, and his hostility to true democracy, led to the brutal invasion of Ukraine, which had opted for freedom and democracy. Other books have analyzed the economic and social dynamics in Russia and Ukraine after 1991. This one chronicles a previously untold story: the role religion played in the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the rise of a newly autocratic Russia, and the emergence of democracy in Ukraine. 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genre | (DE-588)4133254-4 Erlebnisbericht gnd-content |
genre_facet | Erlebnisbericht |
geographic | Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Russland |
id | DE-604.BV049675629 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-11T09:06:26Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781666747973 9781666747980 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035018537 |
oclc_num | 1443577460 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | viii, 182 Seiten Illustrationen 23 cm |
psigel | BSB_NED_20240814 |
publishDate | 2024 |
publishDateSearch | 2024 |
publishDateSort | 2024 |
publisher | Cascade Books |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Yancey, Philip Verfasser (DE-588)122484983 aut What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine by Philip Yancey and John A. Bernbaum Eugene, Oregon Cascade Books [2024] viii, 182 Seiten Illustrationen 23 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Enthält als Kapitel 2 bis 11 Reprint von Philip Yancey: "Praying with the KGB" (1991) "The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 ushered in a tumultuous period for Russia and Ukraine. The Soviet Union broke apart, Communism was exposed as morally bankrupt, and Russian leaders turned to the West for help. In an astonishing development, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin invited a group of American evangelicals to give advice on restoring morality to Russia. The nation was moving toward democratic and religious freedoms until, one decade later, Vladimir Putin abruptly reversed course. He labeled most religious organizations as "foreign agents" and set in motion an aggressive plan to restore the pride of the "Russian world." Putin's alliance with the Russian Orthodox Church, and his hostility to true democracy, led to the brutal invasion of Ukraine, which had opted for freedom and democracy. Other books have analyzed the economic and social dynamics in Russia and Ukraine after 1991. This one chronicles a previously untold story: the role religion played in the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the rise of a newly autocratic Russia, and the emergence of democracy in Ukraine. What lay behind the radically different paths chosen by two former Soviet republics?" -- Publisher's description Geschichte 1991- gnd rswk-swf Politik (DE-588)4046514-7 gnd rswk-swf Religion (DE-588)4049396-9 gnd rswk-swf Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd rswk-swf Evangelistic work / Russia (Federation) Evangelical academies / Russia (Federation) Freedom of religion / Russia (Federation) (DE-588)4133254-4 Erlebnisbericht gnd-content Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 g Politik (DE-588)4046514-7 s Religion (DE-588)4049396-9 s Geschichte 1991- z DE-604 Bernbaum, John A. 1943- Verfasser (DE-588)1210079186 aut Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-6667-4799-7 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035018537&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035018537&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register |
spellingShingle | Yancey, Philip Bernbaum, John A. 1943- What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine Politik (DE-588)4046514-7 gnd Religion (DE-588)4049396-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4046514-7 (DE-588)4049396-9 (DE-588)4076899-5 (DE-588)4133254-4 |
title | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine |
title_auth | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine |
title_exact_search | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine |
title_full | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine by Philip Yancey and John A. Bernbaum |
title_fullStr | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine by Philip Yancey and John A. Bernbaum |
title_full_unstemmed | What went wrong? Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine by Philip Yancey and John A. Bernbaum |
title_short | What went wrong? |
title_sort | what went wrong russia s lost opportunity and the path to ukraine |
title_sub | Russia's lost opportunity and the path to Ukraine |
topic | Politik (DE-588)4046514-7 gnd Religion (DE-588)4049396-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Politik Religion Russland Erlebnisbericht |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035018537&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035018537&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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