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Skovoroda in Early Doukhobor
History - Fact or Myth?
by
Victor O. Buyniak
Hryhory Savych Skovoroda (1722-1794) was a
poet, philosopher and composer in 18th century Russia. Following a brilliant
career teaching at the Kiev, St. Petersburg, Kharkov and Moscow academies, he
spent the last thirty years of his life as an itinerant thinker-beggar
wandering the Russian Empire and teaching a simple philosophy of withdrawal from
the earthly world and the pursuit of happiness and self-knowledge through
direct, personal relationship with God. His ideas closely resembled those of the
Doukhobors, who emerged as a sect at the same time and in the same regions where
Skovoroda lived and taught, leading some scholars of Doukhobor history to view
him as a prominent figure in their religious ideology. The following article
examines the myths and facts surrounding Skovoroda’s role in early Doukhobor
history. Reproduced by permission of the author from "Roots and realities among
Eastern and Central Europeans", edited by Martin Louis Kovacs (Edmonton: Central
and East European Studies Association of Canada, 1983); and "Spirit Wrestlers:
Centennial Papers in Honour of Canada's Doukhobor Heritage", edited by Koozma J.
Tarasoff and Robert B. Klymasz. (Ottawa: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 1995).
Some of the nineteenth and the early twentieth
century scholars of Doukhobor history believed that the philosopher Hryhory
Skovoroda figured prominently as one of the spiritual founders of their
religious ideology. Once recorded and published, these opinions were
reiterated by subsequent researchers. The purpose of this article is to
determine whether there was such an influence, and to trace the historical
development of such hypotheses on the part of the various scholars and
researchers.
Hryhory (in Ukrainian: Hryhory Savych; in Russian: Grigorii Savvich)
Skovoroda was born on 3 December 1722, into a Ukrainian Cossack family of
the Poltava region. At that time this area still formed a part of the
so-called Sloboda-Ukraine, the left-bank territory of the former
Zaporozhian Cossack State. Some important historical changes had occurred in
this region during his lifetime. The Russian tsars had conducted a series of
wars against the Ottoman Empire using, among their other troops, the
Ukrainian Cossack regiments. More and more territory to the south was
conquered from the Turks and became open for colonization and settlement.
After the successful wars waged by Catherine II between 1768 and 1774, the
Ottoman Empire ceded to Russia all the territories north of the Black Sea,
including the Crimea. In 1775 Catherine disbanded the Zaporozhian Cossack
regiments and their territory was divided into Russian gubernias
(administrative units). Catherine encouraged the settlement of these lands
by new colonists, among them various religious dissenters, native and
foreign.
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Portrait of
Hryhory Skovoroda (1722-1794) |
Skovoroda received the finest education available at the time, including two
years at the Mohyla Academy of Kiev, then at the peak of its educational
splendour. After a few years in St. Petersburg, where his beautiful voice
and musical training earned him a position of musical director in the court
choir of the Empress Elizabeth, he returned to his native land and, after
1750, wandered about Central Europe, learning Greek, Latin, German, Hebrew,
even Hungarian. After his return, in 1753, he was invited to teach poetry at
the Pereyaslav Seminary and, later, in 1759, he was lecturer at the Kharkiv
(Russian: Kharkov) Academy. Devoting himself always to the task of knowing
himself and his fellow-men, he believed firmly that humanity and human
capabilities were as inherent in the peasant as in the lord. Deeply
religious, he refused to accept the conventional theology of his time, and
approached the pantheistic deism of the West. Although his dialogues and
essays on literature were lost, his philosophical dialogues, published after
his death, exerted a great influence upon later generations. Skovoroda’s
teachings were published in the form of poems, fables and songs. The
authorities were not happy with his teaching at the Kharkiv Academy and
Skovoroda decided to leave his post there in the late 1760's. From 1769
until his death, November 9th, 1794, in a village not far from Kharkiv,
Skovoroda wandered about Ukraine and parts of Russia as a strannyk, an
itinerant philosopher-theologian, living in the homes of the rich and the
poor, incessantly teaching his way of life.
The Doukhobors had been known earlier to outsiders as Iconoclasts (Ikonobortsy)
and Milk Drinkers (Molokane), and they had already settled in Kharkiv,
Katerynoslav (Russian: Yekaterinoslav) and Tambov regions by the middle of
the eighteenth century. Those from Tambov region believed they originated in
Ukraine. The term dukhobortsy (Spirit-Wrestlers) crystallized in 1785, when
the Archbishop of Yekaterinoslav, Ambrosie, derisively coined it to describe
the followers of Sylvan Kolesnikov. They coexisted in friendly relations
with the Molokane. The rejection of the Holy Script as a written source set
the Doukhobors aside from other sectarians. Another feature that
distinguished them from a number of religious groups was that the tenets of
their philosophy were not written down but were contained in oral tradition
- they were enshrined in the memory and the hearts of the faithful. In time,
the collection of Doukhobor beliefs became known as the Zhivotnaia kniga
dukhobortsev [Doukhobor Book of Life]. Some individuals, both insiders and
outsiders, were or might have been very influential upon the formulation of
these creeds, and Skovoroda might have been one of them.
As already mentioned, for Skovoroda man was the greatest riddle in life, and
self-knowledge the most important means for its solution. His philosophical
system embraces three aspects: the ontological, the cognitive, and the
ethical. According to him, man is a microcosm reflecting the macrocosm. In
order to get to know the universe one must first know oneself.
Self-knowledge was for Skovoroda the first aim of philosophy which he
approached with the Socratic maxim "Know thyself". Like Socrates, he
travelled on foot and taught his philosophy in market places and among
friends and people who would listen to him. His personality may be compared
with that of Lev Tolstoy (a great admirer of his), in his common striving
for a simple life, in the midst of common folk, as well as in their strong
moralizing tendencies. Skovoroda was known to carry all his worldly
possessions in a bag, among them a Hebrew Bible and a flute, both of which
he was very fond. It was this unorthodox style of preaching and travelling
which had a profound impact on peasant masses and which endeared him to
them. Since Skovoroda was known to visit a large number of localities not
only in Ukraine proper but also in the southern part of Russia, he may have
come in contact with dissidents and sectarians in those parts, who would
have been exposed to his teachings. Undoubtedly, the significance of
Skovoroda's instruction had a much wider implication than Ukraine proper.
The dearth of documentation regarding the life and precepts of Skovoroda and
the origin of the Doukhobors and their philosophical tenets that gave rise
to hypotheses concerning his impact on their beliefs. Because Skovoroda
disseminated his philosophy mainly by means of discourses, and since the
religious tenets of the Doukhobors remained for a long time in oral form,
passed from generation to generation, some investigators of Doukhoborism
were inclined to see similarities between his teachings and the Doukhobors'
practices and some have postulated that Skovoroda played a leading role in
the development of Doukhoborism.
It is significant that Skovoroda's Katekhyziz [Catechism under the name of
"The Chief Gate to Christian Morality"], compiled in 1766 and revised in
1780, outlines some rudimentary principles of Christianity similar to the
ones which early Doukhobors held dear. It also may have been significant, or
coincidental, that a Russian Senator, Ivan Vladimirovich Lopukhin, who in
1801 travelled to the Doukhobors in the Kharkiv province on Alexander I's
mission, wrote and published earlier, in 1790, a Katekhyz as well. Both
Skovoroda and the Doukhobors believed in a simple pure life and in
abstinence - a life characterized by meekness and humility vis-a-vis their
neighbours in the biblical sense. They denounced individual property and did
not view favourably the amassment of material goods. The Doukhobors were
courteous in their dealings with strangers but they did not recognize ranks
or offices. This was precisely Skovoroda's attitude. One could quote the
well-known incident when he refused to recognize the Governor Shcherbinin so
long as the latter insisted on being addressed by his official title, but
accepted him as his equal on the basis of his first name and patronymic.
Thus, in the second half of the 18th century, when Skovoroda was engaged in
his wanderings and teaching, the Doukhobors were residing on the same
territory where he was preaching. Mutual contacts and interaction of the two
are not excluded, although definite proofs of such relations lack written
documentation. Nevertheless, the very probability of personal contacts
contributed to the spreading of certain myths and suppositions regarding
Skovoroda and the Doukhobors. These myths occasionally made their way into
the published works of various researchers. Let us consider one such account
presented in a book by a Canadian author:
After Kolesnikoffs death, a bearded pilgrim strode into the village holding
a Hebrew Bible in one hand and a flute in the other. His name was Gregory S.
Skovoroda (1722-94). He was trained for priesthood. He was a wandering
philosopher, a Theologian, who had escaped from the famous monastery "Pecherskaja
Lavra" in Kiev, pretending he was insane. This stranger lived among the
Doukhobors about ten years and vanished as mysteriously as he came.
He composed songs for the Doukhobors and made melodies to their psalms. He
played them on the flute until they could be memorized. The Doukhobors are
still lolling these melodies.
He wrote down "The Confession of Faith of the Doukhobors in the
Ekaterinoslaw Province". This catechism was handed over to Governor
Kakhovsky in Ekaterinoslaw in 1791. This was the first written statement
that came from a Doukhobor community. |
Aylmer Maude (1858-1938), Tolstoy's friend and translator of his works into
English, who was involved in the negotiations with the Canadian authorities
concerning the immigration of the Doukhobors into this country in 1899, had
the following to say in this regard:
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That, under the circumstances of the time, this peasant sect should have
been able to formulate such reasonable and coherent views ... seems
wonderful; but what we know of the life of the philosopher, Gregory
Skovoroda, who, reports say, drew up for the Doukhobors the confession of
faith they supplied to the Governor of Ekaterinoslav, throws some light on
this manner in which such ideas were formulated. |
Maude adds that a man of the type of Skovoroda could perform a great service for the peasant masses.
Among other things, Skovoroda was a musical composer whose verses and
tunes were still popular with the Molokane in the first decade of the 20th
century. The fertile period of psalm composition, the late 18th - early 19th
century, was the time when the psalms (which were the chief
Doukhobor-produced historical sources) originated. They have been garnered
from other, non-Doukhobor, sources.
The first researcher on Doukhobors and Doukhoborism was Orest Markovich
Novitsky (1806-84), student of the Kiev Academy, who prepared his treatise
on the subject to fulfil the requirements for a degree in theology, later
professor of philosophy at the University of Kiev until 1850. His work
appeared in book form for the first time in 1832. Later, he expanded and
published a second edition in 1883. Novitsky does not mention the connection
of Skovoroda with the Doukhobors. However, he admits that the
above-mentioned "Confession of Faith", compiled in 1791, indicates an
authorship of someone well-educated: the profound knowledge of the Bible,
the acquaintance with foreign languages, an elaborate, polished style and
some words and expressions totally unfamiliar to illiterate people.
It was Novitsky's critic, G. Varadinov, who, while reviewing the former's
book, advanced the theory that Skovoroda had a pronounced influence on the
Doukhobors. He criticized Novitsky for not mentioning it in his book on the
Doukhobors. Varadinov was convinced that Skovoroda contributed greatly to
the dissemination of the Doukhobor beliefs in the Kharkov Gubernia, and that
the Molokane copied his works, used his verses, and sang the psalms adapted
by him.
Later students of Skovoroda's philosophy and biography, in addition to
sharing or refuting the points of view of Novitsky or Varadinov pertaining
to this subject, advanced some new hypotheses. For example, V. F. Ern, a
Skovoroda biographer, believed that in the person of the philosopher there
was the make-up of a potential sectarian, and, moreover, that Skovoroda was
the initiator of the Russian Slavophile movement. Another prominent
Skovoroda scholar, D. I. Bahalii, admits, like Ern, that the philosopher
stood in some form of silent opposition to the official Orthodox Church,
without, however, being its enemy in principle. But he was as much against
the dogmatism and intolerance of any established Church as he was against
the superstitions and the fanatical beliefs of the sectarians. Skovoroda was
opposed in general to all sets of philosophical rules which compelled a man
to follow a rigid interpretation of faith.
Similarly, nineteenth-century students of Russian sectarianism speculated on
the possibilities of Skovoroda's influence on the spiritual beliefs of the
Doukhobors and the Molokane. Thus, F. V. Livanov, a writer and a government
official, concluded that in all the archival material which he had used in
his research he could not find corroboration that Skovoroda might be, on
some basis, considered as the philosopher of one of these sects. Livanov
concluded that some attitudes of the sectarians appealed to Skovoroda, as,
for example, the contempt for objects made of gold or silver, but there was
no general convergence of his views and theirs. What the researcher found
was a document (listed as No. 32, Case of 1802, Archives of the Ministry of
the Internal Affairs) which mentioned that the Molokane, especially those
residing in the south, had been using some of Skovoroda's adaptations of
psalms and melodies, in particular his Vsiakomu horodu [To Every City], on
certain festive occasions. According to P.N. Malov, another researcher, A.
S. Lebedev, a professor of church history, in his work, Dukhobortsy v slobodskoi Ukrainie [The Doukhobors in Eastern Ukraine],
Istorichesko-Filologicheskoe Obshchestvo (The Historico-Philological
Society), 1803, mentions an 1801 criminal case against the Doukhobors, where
the name of a witness was Skovoroda. Obviously, this must have been another
person with the same name, since Hryhory Skovoroda had died in 1794.
Paul N. Miliukov (1859-1943), a historian of Russian culture, says the
following on the subject:
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It is significant that the ardent and popular preaching of the famous
Ukrainian mystic and philosopher, Gregory Skovoroda, dates from that period
(between the sixties and nineties of the eighteenth century) in which the
sect of the Doukhobors was founded. Gregory Skovoroda, while not a member of
any sect, was a Sectarian in spirit; except for the doctrine on
reincarnation, his views were identical with those of the Doukhobors, and he
frankly called himself an "Abrahamite" (a Bohemian sect similar to the
Doukhobors) in his letters to friends. 'Let everyone else do as he pleases,'
he wrote, 'I have devoted myself wholly to seeking the divine wisdom. We
were born to that end, and I live by it, think of it day and night, and by
it I shall die.' In all Skovoroda's works, so highly praised by Russian
Sectarians, Spiritual Christianity is ardently propagated. |
Certainly, such axioms as "compared to faith the ceremonies are as husk to
the grain or compliments to true kindness," could only endear Skovoroda to
people like the Doukhobors who rejected the external rituals of religion.
The official confession of faith written by the Yekaterinoslav Doukhobors
and presented to Governor Kahovsky during their imprisonment in 1791, bears
close similarity to the ideas of Skovoroda, although a direct influence is
impossible to prove. The most probable inference is that when the confession
was prepared the same ideas had been more or less adopted by all Spiritual
Christians. From this confession, however, it is evident that the writers
were possessed of natural eloquence and skilful literary expression. In
spite of defects in the exposition, the ideas presented make up a complete
and harmonious system, possessing a philosophical basis similar to that of
ancient Gnosticism.
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Statue of
Hryhory Skovoroda in Kiev, Ukraine. |
From the above exposition it becomes evident that the speculations or
suppositions of various Skovoroda biographers, students of Russian
philosophy or of Russian sectarianism may have persuaded later scholars that
Skovoroda really was a founder or philosopher of this or that religious
movement. These scholars included Vladimir Dmitrievich Bonch-Bruevich
(1873-1955), the well-known Marxist, writer, historian, ethnographer, and
student of Russian sectarianism. Because of his political and scholarly
prestige, his theories concerning the role of Skovoroda in the formation of
various Russian sects (including that of Doukhoborism) were widespread.
In searching for a prototype of communal living, Bonch-Bruevich became
interested in various sects, among them, the Doukhobors. He believed that
the Doukhobors lived on the basis of a communal system and as such were the
closest, among the Russian peasants, to the tenets of Communism. He came
with the Doukhobors to Canada in June 1899, and lived with them in this
country until the end of January 1900. He also visited those who remained in
the Caucasus in the spring of 1910. His interest, and that of other
researchers in the life and the beliefs of the Russian sectarians culminated
in a project to publish a number of works dealing with this subject,
entitled, Materiaux pour servir a I'histoire des sectes russes. The editor
of this series, Bonch-Bruevich, appealed to those interested to send
material about the sects either to himself or to Vladimir Chertkov's
Publishing House in England. Unfortunately, owing to adverse circumstances
at the time, Bonch-Bruevich was able to publish only a small number of the
projected volumes.
One of his books expressed the idea that the philosophical views and
opinions of Skovoroda resembled those of the sect known as New-Israel. He
wrote:
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Already in 1900, when I began to study systematically the Weltanschauung
[world-view] of
the Russian Spiritual Christians - the Israelitans, I also became acquainted
with the works of Skovoroda. His ideas were similar to the socio-religious
views widespread at that time in Russia, which were contemptuously called
khiystovstvo (flagellatory) by the clergy. We are firmly convinced that
Skovoroda was one of the main theoreticians of the Russian "Spiritual
Christians". His works represent a revealing expose of all that was
discussed around him clandestinely by the peasant masses. We are convinced
that he added to these views and further developed them, thus exerting an
enormous influence on the formation of thought which kept circulating among
the members of these socio-religious groups, ever growing in strength in
spite of all the preventive measures (by the authorities). If anyone wishes
to learn and to understand the ancient teachings of the "Spiritual
Christians" which have reached our times he should study thoroughly the
works of Skovoroda. |
Bonch-Bruevich planned to give detailed proofs of Skovoroda's spiritual
relationship with the Russian sectarians in the second volume of his
publication which was to be dedicated to an exposition of the thinker's
philosophy. Again, unfortunately, this sequel never appeared in print. A
number of later Skovoroda scholars criticized Bonch-Bruevich's edition of
Skovoroda's works with regard to his subjective attempt to connect him with
the world of the Russian sectarians.
M. P. Red'ko, whose work reflects the Soviet evaluation of Skovoroda's
philosophy, denies any possibility of the philosopher's having been a
founder or spiritual mentor of any Russian or Ukrainian religious sect. He
considers as groundless the attempts by Miliukov and Bonch-Bruevich to mould
Skovoroda into a latent sectarian. He rejects Bonch-Bruevich's endeavours to
equate the philosopher with the Russian Spiritual Christians - especially in
considering him one of the chief theoreticians of the New-Israel sect.
According to Red'ko, Bonch-Bruevich exaggerated the importance of sectarians
in peasant movements before the Revolution of 1905. However, Red'ko assures
the reader that toward the end of his life Bonch-Bruevich had already
changed his previous opinions and did not insist on Skovoroda being the
theoretician of the Doukhobor sect.
Red'ko discounts also as inconclusive the opinion that some of Skovoroda's
works were current among the Doukhobors and the Molokane during the 19th
century, as attested by Varadinov and Livanov. This did not prove in itself
that their author belonged to these sects or was consciously involved in
shaping their philosophical tenets. Another contemporary Soviet Russian
scholar, Aleksandr Ilich Klibanov, devotes considerable space in his work
arguing that Skovoroda was connected spiritually with the Doukhobors and
that the "Confession of Faith" of 1791 was written by him.
Thus, the extant written evidence so far does not provide a conclusive proof
of Skovoroda's involvement with the Doukhobors. In his own opinion, he
viewed sectarianism with skepticism. He always objected strongly when anyone
tried to accuse him of belonging to any sectarian movement. He would say:
"The love of one's neighbour is non-denominational and non-sectarian". The
philosopher, in his long and fruitful life, did show at times some
unorthodox tendencies and beliefs with regard to the official Church of the
day. Nevertheless, he never severed relations with this Church. Any
influence that his works or teachings might have exerted on the religious
philosophy of the Doukhobors or other similar sects were coincidental and,
apparently, non-intentional. Nowhere in the documents can one find any
direct indications of his being consciously involved in establishing or
actively supporting such sects. Nor is there any sound indication of his
being indebted in the formulation of his own Weltanschauung to any ideas or
beliefs of the Doukhobors or other Spiritual Christians of the time.
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