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Ruska revolucija in slovensko narodno vprašanje : katoliški (akademski) pogled iz prve polovice 20. stoletja
ID Malmenvall, Simon (Author)

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Abstract
Franc Grivec (1878–1963), dolgoletni profesor na ljubljanski Teološki fakulteti, velja za prvega sistematičnega proučevalca vzhodnega krščanstva med slovenskimi avtorji. Pomemben del Grivčevih objav predstavlja idejna analiza oktobrske boljševiške revolucije iz leta 1917, ki je v njegovem času, zaznamovanem z družbeno-gospodarskimi spremembami in iskanjem novih kolektivnih identitet, predstavljala pereče javno vprašanje. To najbolj izčrpno obravnava v poljudni monografiji (Narodna zavest in boljševizem) iz leta 1944, sestavljeni na podlagi predavanj ljubljanskim osnovnošolskim učiteljem in srednješolskim profesorjem. Skrajnost boljševikov je po Grivčevem prepričanju del širšega mehanizma ruske kulturne zgodovine, v kateri se je večkrat pojavljala misel o mesijanskem poslanstvu, začenši z idejo o Moskvi kot o ‚Tretjem Rimu‘. Grivec katoliške izobražence poziva, naj, da bi preprečili uspeh revolucije na slovenskih tleh, krščanska načela uveljavljajo v javnosti, pri čemer naj v nasprotju z internacionalističnim socializmom skrbijo tudi za reflektirano narodno zavest. Grivčeve poglede smiselno dopolnjuje predstavnik takratne mlajše generacije katoliških izobražencev France Dolinar (1915–1983), ki se je zaradi političnih pritiskov v domovini odločil za življenje v emigraciji. Dolinar se Grivcu približuje s poudarjanjem dela za skupni narodni cilj namesto ‚strankarstva‘, a ga radikalno presega z mislijo o samostojni slovenski državi, ki naj bi bila pravo nasprotje socialistične teorije o odmiranju narodov.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:ruska kultura, boljševizem, pravoslavje, katoliški družbeni nauk, slovensko narodno vprašanje, zgodovina visokega šolstva
Work type:Article
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:TEOF - Theological Faculty
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Publication date:01.01.2023
Year:2023
Number of pages:Str. 957-972
Numbering:Letn. 83, [št.] 4
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-164229 This link opens in a new window
UDC:378Grivec F.:271.2
ISSN on article:0006-5722
DOI:10.34291/BV2023/04/Malmenvall This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:179026179 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:17.10.2024
Views:71
Downloads:13
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Record is a part of a journal

Title:Bogoslovni vestnik : glasilo Teološke fakultete v Ljubljani
Shortened title:Bogosl. vestn.
Publisher:Teološka fakulteta
ISSN:0006-5722
COBISS.SI-ID:8745472 This link opens in a new window

Licences

License:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Description:This is the standard Creative Commons license that gives others maximum freedom to do what they want with the work as long as they credit the author.

Secondary language

Language:English
Title:Russian revolution and Slovenian national question : a Catholic (academic) view from the first half of the twentieth century
Abstract:
Franc Grivec (1878–1963), a long-time professor at the Faculty of Theology in Ljubljana, is considered a pioneer in systematic research of Eastern Christianity among Slovenian authors. A significant part of Grivec’s published work is dedicated to the ideational analysis of the October Revolution of 1917, which presented a topical public issue of his time, conditioned by socio-economic change and the seeking of new collective identities. This is most thoroughly addressed in the monograph for a wider audience (National Consciousness and Bolshevism) originally written by Grivec based on his lectures to the primaryand high-school teachers of Ljubljana in 1944. According to Grivec, the extremism of the Bolsheviks represents a part of the wider mechanism of Russian cultural history, in which the concept of a messianic mission, starting with the idea of Moscow as the “Third Rome,” appeared several times. The mentioned author calls on Catholic intellectuals to assert Christian principles in public and foster a reflected national consciousness as opposed to the internationalist socialism, in order to prevent the success of the revolution on Slovenian soil. His views are organically complemented by France Dolinar (1915–1983), a representative of the younger generation of Catholic scholars of the time, who decided to live in emigration due to the political pressures in his homeland. Dolinar draws close to Grivec with the emphasis on the engagement for the common national cause against the “political partisan mindset”; on the other hand, Dolinar surpasses Grivec with his idea for the independent Slovenian state, which would be a real opposite to the socialist theory on the extinction of nations.

Keywords:Russian culture, Bolshevism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Catholic social teaching, Slovenian national question, history of higher education

Projects

Funder:ARIS - Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency
Project number:P6-0269
Name:Religija, etika, edukacija in izzivi sodobne družbe

Funder:ARIS - Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency
Project number:J5-4595
Name:Med tradicijo in moderno: slovenski katoliški intelektualci in narodnostno vprašanje v transnacionalni perspektivi (1848−1948)

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