2008 Fellow Emily B. Baran offers a gripping history of how a small, American-based religious community, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, found its way into the Soviet Union after World War II, survived decades of brutal persecution, and emerged as one of the region’s fastest growing religions after the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991. In telling the story of this often misunderstood faith, Baran explores the shifting boundaries of religious dissent, non-conformity, and human rights in the Soviet Union and its successor states.

Soviet Jehovah’s Witnesses are a fascinating case study of dissent beyond urban, intellectual nonconformists. Witnesses, who were generally rural, poorly educated, and utterly marginalized from society, resisted state pressure to conform. They instead constructed alternative communities based on adherence to religious principles established by the Witnesses’ international center in Brooklyn, New York. The Soviet state considered Witnesses to be the most reactionary of all underground religious movements, and used extraordinary measures to try to eliminate this threat. Yet Witnesses survived, while the Soviet system did not. After 1991, they faced continuing challenges to their right to practice their faith in post-Soviet states, as these states struggled to reconcile the proper limits on freedom of conscience with European norms and domestic concerns.

Dissent on the Margins provides a new and important perspective on one of America’s most understudied religious movements. Buy it on Amazon.

Publication Details

Title
Dissent on the Margins: How Soviet Jehovah’s Witnesses Defied Communism and Lived to Preach About It
Authors
Baran, Emily Bruderle
Publisher
University of Oxford / Oxford University Press
Publish Date
March 2016
ISBN
978-0190495497
Citation
Baran, Emily Bruderle, Dissent on the Margins: How Soviet Jehovah's Witnesses Defied Communism and Lived to Preach About It (University of Oxford / Oxford University Press, March 2016).
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