photo: unity of Slavs
On 31 July at 5 pm an on-line conference was organized initiated by the Unity of Slavs movement from the Czech and Slovak Republics. The international participation itself was very interesting. Countries such as the Czech Republic, Serbia, the Republic of Belarus, Bulgaria, Ukraine, as well as Germany were represented. The impetus for this very interesting conference was also given by the theme "The unity of the Slavs the future of Europe". Interesting guests from the field of political science, geopolitics, writers and journalists also participated. Among the first to speak were Slobodan Stojcevic, political scientist and writer from the Republic of Serbia, Grigory Azarenok, a journalist covering geopolitical issues from Belarus, Nikola Uryvsky journalist and chairman of the Eurasian Movement from Germany, Dr. Jan Campbell, Prof. h.c. analyst, writer, columnist and chairman of the Academic Council of the Institute of the Czech Left in Prague from the Czech Republic. Also participating from the Czech Republic was a Czech journalist and political scientist Roman Blaško.
The Unity of the Slavs is a movement of Christian and social values. Its mission is to revive the values that unite us and to create a strong bond between the Slavic peoples. Our aim is to protect our common heritage and to promote the social and economic development of Slovakia and the whole of Europe. Our movement is also oriented towards young people who think progressively but also have an ethical mindset. We create the conditions for working together to build a strong and united community of Slavic unity. Together, we can face today's challenges with courage and determination while preserving what is most important to us. Our unity and common commitment to traditional principles and values will provide a solid foundation for building the future of all Slavic peoples. Written by Peter Marček, chairman of the Slovak movement and political party Unity of Slavs and one of the initiators, who in the end was unable to join the conference for technical reasons and sent his contribution in writing.
In the live online broadcast of the conference Unity of Slavs, the future of Europe was opened by Slobodan Stojcevic who said: "The current situation of all Slavs here in Eastern Europe is well known to everyone. For example, we have a Slavic movement here in Serbia. It is true that we have been organizing for several years, but we can do little, just like the other Eastern European countries, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria. And the most important problem is that we have no idea on what basis and for what reasons we would unite. As is clear to everyone, on one side there is Russia, Belarus, Serbia and Republika Srpska as Serbian states, which of course people feel are part of the Slavic Orthodox world. And on the other side there are many Slavic states. We are in Slovenia, a generally Catholic country, and Croatia is also a Catholic country. Then there is the Muslim part of Bosnia, Herzegovina, they are generally themselves, although they are Slavs by genetic component, they are former Serbs. Well, we can also say the current ones who are Muslims."
Furthermore, according to Stojcevic, Macedonia, which is a member of NATO, of course has a problem with self-determination, where it can be included at all, because it is sandwiched between Albania, Greece and Bulgaria. And I am not talking about all the Western Slavs, the Poles, the Slovaks, the Czechs, who now, in my opinion, have to find their own way. And of course, Stojcevic goes on to say. Ukraine itself, where it is not at all clear whether it is part of the Russian world, because Ukrainians are Orthodox Slavs, and they now have to decide.
Stojcevic continued, "So the Slavs have a large field of action to speak of. As the Slavic movement, the Serbian branch of the Slavic movement, we participated in Prague a few years ago. I think there was a Slavic congress in 2019-18. But that is largely organized by Russians and a few of us who would like to somehow find a place for our countries and our peoples in this Slavic movement. So it seems to me that this is the main problem we need to solve. We cannot unite on the basis of Orthodoxy because many Slavic nations are no longer Orthodox." Right now the question of values is being addressed. Who's for the family, who's for... It doesn't matter about the Catholic faith, the Orthodox faith, maybe even some Protestant faith. But if someone doesn't accept European values, Western values, LGBT, gender issues, and everything else that goes with it, and that means sodomy, euthanasia, breaking up the family, consumer society, and so on."
And he added the main thing. "There is a world majority and there is a world minority, a golden billion, who are now trying to impose their vision of the world, of life, of destiny, on all of us. If I may say so, I would give my opinion. Everything else, our brotherhood, our Slavicness, the fact that we speak almost the same language, the fact that we are genetically close and so on, it was Christ who said if your eye tempts you, dig it out. If your hand tempts you, cut it off. So no other fraternity is possible with a people, with a nation, with a political movement that supports or even like the Ukrainians fights for the destruction of the family, against the family, against the foundations of morality and fights for the rights of lesbians, LGBT, sodomites and so on. One minority, pernicious, dangerous, is the golden billion, which unfortunately includes all of Europe, and the legal power of Serbia, and the world majority, where there are 85 % of the world population that does not want this ideology of death, euthanasia, sodomy and all the rest. And I think the majority of the nations that live in both Europe and America that even belong to this so-called golden billion. We see it quite clearly what is happening now with the Orthodox Church in Ukraine, in Moldova and in Romania. If we move on to the family agenda, to the fact that we support traditional values and that we are not supporters of the death and evil ideology of the West, then I can see that we have something to talk about. Then we can talk to the world majority, even to Iran, even to Korea, even to China, because the whole world is now divided into just two camps."
Another representative of the conference was Grigory Azarenok from Belarus. He greeted all the heroes from Minsk, the capital of the Republic of Belarus. Azarenok in a very strong and sonorous voice said: "Belarus is not at all deaf to the theme of the Unity of the Slavs. In 1994, when Alexander Lukashenko came to power, the theme of Slavic unity, the unity of this strong, powerful European, Eurasian tribe, this is of course essential for us. Moreover, also on a symbolic level, when our president came to power, he immediately restored the Slavic Bazaar art festival. Many cultural and artistic figures from various Slavic countries, well, not only now, but often participated in it. And this was a symbolic response to the policy of disunity, the policy of hostility, the policy of worshipping Atlanticism, the West and liberalism that prevailed in those years."
Azarenok said that he was convinced that liberalism as such, as its doctrine, as a philosophy that was born in the depths of the West, that was preached by those French Enlighteners, and then became common to the whole of Western civilization, he said that it was a deeply anti-Slavic ideology, a deeply anti-Slavic current. At all levels, at the level of mythology, at the level of the family, at the level of life, everyday life, principles and everything else. We started fighting it immediately, so to speak, and he added that Soros was kicked out of Belarus in the mid-1990s.
"I think our friends, brothers, comrades from Serbia are present here, they all remember the year 99, the barbaric bombing of Yugoslavia by NATO troops, the Americans and the arrival of Alexander Grigorievich Lukashenko there in April. We remember, of course, we remember and we are grateful to this day, they are our great friends, of course. Yes, of course, we lived through this tragedy together as well. NATO did not guarantee security then, but Alexander Lukashenko still came, met the wounded, met Slobodan Milosevic, tried to establish peace, but then, unfortunately, the Russian Federation did not have the geopolitical power it has now." Grigory Azarenok said.
"By the way, including the solovianism of Serbia itself, it seems to me that that was one of the reasons for all the hatred, the fury of all the phosphorus bombs, the barbaric bombing of bridges by the American occupiers, the American aggressors," he said he was absolutely convinced of that.
In Belarus, according to Azarenok, national politics, cultural politics, ideological politics, are most conducive to the unification of the Slavs. He further said that the Slavs should remember what it means when I greet you and pray for your souls brothers from all Slavic lands and so on, just remember the so-called Pan-Slavism, and here we have always stood on the position of this unification of the Slavs.
"Unfortunately, you said it right, not only the belonging to the Slavic nation, to the Slavic tribe, as they used to say in the 19th century, but also the geopolitical orientation of the elites, and unfortunately we are on the border with a big Slavic state, the state of Poland, whose elites, unfortunately, again unfortunately, are not the people and not the intellectual power, but just the ruling elites. They are being set up by the Anglo-Saxons and the Americans and they are pursuing a crude anti-Belarusian policy, but we are responding to this by, for example, announcing visa-free travel for ordinary people in the border area, for ordinary people in Poland, and people are coming to us in large numbers, staying with us either for a few days or permanently. Well, an example is the Polish judge Toma Schmidt, who recently moved to Belarus and now lives here, runs social networks, talks about Belarus, and we have always stood, again, on the principles that we, the Slavs, must stick together here, on this big continent, the Eurasian continent. And we have always, perhaps somewhere, even naively, somewhere even in a dream, preached this policy of the unity of the Slavs, yes, we understand perfectly well that this geopolitical split, it comes from such fundamental reasons, that is the attitude towards Orthodoxy, for example, that is the attitude basically towards the Russian Federation, with which we chose the original union."
Grigory Azarenok says he's sure we'll all meet sooner or later. Why did he say that? "Because I'm absolutely convinced that the Anglo-Saxons and the Romans, if we're talking about the Slavs, let's think of other civilizations, the Anglo-Saxons and the Romans condemned us. As far as the Balkans are concerned, as far as the Serbs are concerned, of course Western Europe, Germany, is interested in dominating there and, at most, in belittling the Slavs. As for Eastern Europe, it has always been the field of such mischief by the Anglo-Saxons and of course by both German campaigns to the East, not forgetting the Drang on the tail. And that is why, as the Special Forces say, you know, the enemy will not betray us, and that is why I am convinced that the Slavs, whatever political, religious, especially political, of course, lines now divide us, we still have to be and will be together. Azarenok said that everybody will understand anyway that the Satanism that was demonstrated at the French Olympics, and the euthanasia, the civilization of death, the Henri Levy, the eternal LGBT that has just been mentioned here. It is the absolute enemy not only of all religions but of all life in the world. That is why the Slavs must unite."
Roman Blaško, who took the moderation on this topic, thanked Grigory Azarenok from the Belarusian Hero City of Minsk.
(continued August 6).
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