Sun, 1 Jan 2017 | Cover | Page 12

A Warning from Russia. . .

Alexander Dugin: A Werewolf

By Elena Chudinova (Translated for The Remnant by Eugene Girin) Russians sighed in relief when Donald Trump won the presidential election.

In the last decade and a half, Russian society did not experience such an outburst of sympathy for the United States and Americans as it did since November 8th. Only the liberals and the communists do not share the general mood. To the former, Hilary Clinton was the ideal of America, with all that stands behind this destructive persona: democratization tours around the world, further destruction of the family, secularism, and other wicked policies known all too well to be listed again here.

In Russian liberal circles, people feel like the wind was knocked out of them.

And the communists, who are used to peddle and profit from the negative image of America, do not want a thaw in relations between our countries. The rest of Russian society hopes for this thaw and are sympathetic to the expected conservative path of the incoming administration.

The person I seek to warn Remnant readers about is not terribly important in the context of above-mentioned events.

However, as Christians, we need to beware of lies in both large and small contexts. I foresee that our countries may well cooperate in a conservative sense, in the spheres of religion, philosophy, and culture. Unfortunately, up to this point, all American-Russian dialogue was held by liberals from both countries. Everything, including book publishing was an example of liberal destructiveness.

This new conservative-minded cooperation would be a very good thing indeed. Allow me some artistic license. Let us imagine that the United States is putting together a round table discussion on such conservative aims as the religious education of youth, the family as a "little Church", the fight against abortion, and the like. "Hmm...", ponders a high-ranking Russian official, "We must send a delegation... a very serious endeavor... but who would represent us there? It must be someone with both a solidly conservative reputation and advanced degrees..."

The official then thinks of a certain middle-aged, presentable man, with an unruly beard, dressed in a rustic skewcollared shirt. This man is always on the television screens, at the dais of many patriotic meetings, and on the pages of newspapers. "Dugin!" exclaims the high-ranking official with relief. The problem is solved, an ambassador for Russian conservative thought on the international arena is found. Maybe Alexander Dugin will even be sent to the United States through the Russian foreign ministry.

The funny thing is, Dugin will be very happy to go make friends with America.

Maybe he sincerely forgot how in 2008, on the pages of "Profil" magazine, he called for the physical destruction of the "land of heresy", as he designated the United States. He even came up with philosophic and theological bases for his proposal.

Alexander Dugin has a remarkably short memory, so that aspects of his biography that are no longer advantageous, rapidly disappear from it. Fortunately, other people do not have such memory problems. I do not know who exactly (a person who is powerful yet unwise and mendacious) is behind the effort to present Dugin as a leading Russian conservative, patriot, and Orthodox Christian. Nowadays, it is practically impossible to take down this concocted image, but we could at least prevent this lie from being perpetuated in other countries.

The present-day created image of Dugin is a lie. The only true part is that Dugin is a Russian. But he is not a Christian, not a patriot, and not a conservative.

The well-known "beard, rustic shirt, traditionalism" image of Dugin began to circulate since the 2000s. Alexander Dugin himself admitted that his family became religious Russian Orthodox Christians in the end of the 1990s.

And all of the sudden, this far from young neophyte starts teaching Russian Orthodox spirituality from every television screen. A bit too early for a neophyte to preach to others. But in light of other aspects of Dugin’s biography this is not too important.

Also, not of crucial importance is the fact that Professor Dugin, who teaches in the department of sociology at the top university of Russia – Moscow State University – apparently graduated from Novocherkassk Engineering-Melioration Institute after studying there part time.

And even the validity of that rather humble diploma arouses serious doubts.

Since his youth, Alexander Dugin was closely associated with the recently departed Islamic extremist Geydar Dzhemal. They were both members of the "Black Order of the SS" secret society headed by the infamous occultist Yevgeny Golovin, who acted as the "reichsfuhrer".

Below is one of the songs written by Golovin and sung by the young Alexander Dugin and Geydar Dzhemal:

«Let’s drive ahead, young men, with roughness and with violence, For us, a swastika does shine in the night!

And we will live to see your corpses Dance tango in the gas ovens.

Oh, how fresh and wonderful the roses, How sinister the sounds of the Bryansk forest: An SS division embarks on its last voyage onto the Via Dolorosa."

Note the sacrilege in the last line, very typical for Golovin and his disciples.

Dugin also composed poetry, which glorified Himmler and Welteislehre (the World Ice theory of Nazi pseudoscience). About five years ago, these wretched verses were removed from the Internet and, when Dugin was reminded of them during a television interview, he denied ever writing them.

Dugin’s enchantment with Nazi mysticism cannot be explained away as a youthful indiscression. After all, the occult side of the Third Reich is one of the leading interests of Dugin’s life.

Only a few years ago, Dugin, together with Dzhemal, performed an occult ritual on the graveside of their mentor Golovin, this was recorded on video, which is available on the website of the Eurasianist Youth Union, an organization headed by Dugin. Also a few years ago, Dugin, Dzhemal, Maksim Shevchenko (a crypto-Muslim and supporter of extremist Islamic organizations), and other people founded the "Florian Geyer" philosophy club, as in 8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer, the hymn of which Dugin mentioned at the inaugural meeting of the club.

Dugin’s extremely close ties to Dzhemal is worth an in-depth look. After all, Dzhemal was a committed hater of Russia and the Christian world and had ties to such Islamic terrorists as Said Buryatsky, Emir Khattab, Shamil Basaev, and many others. There is much evidence that Dugin lobbies on behalf of Islamic extremism. "The Russian ministry of internal affairs considers it odd that [Chechen leader] Khozh-Ahmed Nukhayev appeared in Moscow in the summer of 2001 to participate in a conference on Eurasianism organized by Alexander Dugin", wrote murdered Russian-American journalist Paul Klebnikov in his book "A Conversation with a Barbarian". The Russian head prosecutor’s office accuses Nukhayev of the murder. However, on Dugin’s Eurasianist website, Nukhayev is still described as a respected "Islamic traditionalist". In the Dugin-Dzhemal duet, Dugin is without a doubt, the follower, while Dzhemal is the leader.

The Eurasianist Youth Union lobbies immigration into Russia from Muslim countries and lavishes exhuberant praise on Genghis Khan, whose "symbol" is on their banner.

People in Russian Orthodox circles are confused why Dugin appears on television channels as a "Russian Orthodox philosopher". His views, from his youth to the present, are a development of the ideas of Aleister Crowley, Rene Guenon, as well as Yevgeny Golovin. There is a well known essay by Dugin, "Put my corpse in the sedges", which glorifies Soviet serial killer Chikatilo and Dyonisian cults. The Eurasianist Youth Union actively preaches communist doctrine and the cult of Stalin and Lenin.

Since the days of his youth, Dugin engaged in vice typical in occult circles.

There are more than a few stories about his homosexual affairs. After all, homosexuality was practiced in the secret society of Yevgeny Golovin.

Without a doubt, rumours are not facts, but let us ask ourselves: What kind of men usually marry lesbians? And here we have an undisputed fact: Dugin’s first marriage was to famous LGBT activist Yevgeniya Debryanskaya.

All of the abovementioned aspects of Dugin’s past and much more, which cannot be covered in the space of one article, are easily accessible. On the Internet, there is a video of a disgusting show, dedicated to the memory of Aleister Crowley. This show, in which Dugin actively participates, includes a nauseating mockery of the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Overall, this show has an openly sodomitic character.

Known political scientist and journalist D. Galkovsky as well as philosopher Redzhabek wrote about the true essence of Dugin. I also wrote about Dugin, for the website of a popular political magazine called "Expert".

But it is futile to try to shout down the television. Vast numbers of working people simply have no time to independently research the biographies of media personas. A bearded man with a Russian face, in a traditional Russian dress comes on the screen and pontificates about family values, Russian Orthodox morality, and the love for the Motherland. People listen and nod, they like Dugin.

Simple people who are not interested in politics and are religious on the surface, simply do not know that the real Dugin is an occultist (on the verge of Satanism and perhaps even beyond the verge), Islamophile, a betrayer of the European civilization, a communist, and a pervert.

I am simply issuing a warning: this man is an absolute werewolf. A mendacious and very sneaky one. ■

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