The way a person lives his life and his
religious beliefs can greatly affect history and the well being of a
nation. A life of stealing and lying can
kill you and destroy a nation, while leading a Godly life will keep you and
everyone around you protected. Rasputin,
in both his distorted religious beliefs and lifestyle, not only got himself
killed, but changed the history of Russia and the world forever.
Rasputin was born Grigory Yefimovich Novykh in
1872, to a Siberian family, in the town of Pokrovskoye. Even though Grigory attended school, he
remained illiterate throughout his whole life.
His licentious reputation also earned him the nickname Rasputin, which is Russian for "debauched
one." At the age of 18, he
apparently underwent a religious conversion and eventually went to a monastery
in Verkhoture where he was taught the beliefs of the Khlysty sect. Rasputin perverted these beliefs into the
doctrine that one is nearest to God when feeling "holy
passionlessness" and that you reached this state after sexual exhaustion
that comes after prolonged debauchery.
Rasputin did not become a monk.
Instead he returned home and married Proskovia Fyodorovna, who bore him
four children. Marriage did not satisfy
him, so he left home and wandered to Mount Athos, Greece, and Jerusalem living
off peasant donations as a self-proclaimed holy man with the ability to heal
the sick and predict the future.
Rasputin's travels took him to St. Petersburg
where he was welcomed with open arms.
The court circles at that time were entertaining themselves with
mysticism and the occult. So Rasputin's
alleged extraordinary healing power was
warmly accepted. In 1905 Rasputin was
introduced to the royal family, and in 1908 was called to the palace by Nicholas
II and Alexandra during one of their hemophiliac son's bleeding spells. Rasputin successfully relieved the boy's pain
and while leaving the palace told the boy's parents that the destiny of both
the boy and the nation's destiny was
linked to him, thereby setting in motion a decade of Rasputin's influence on
the royal family and affairs of state.
In the presence of the royal family, Rasputin
maintained the posture of a humble and holy pheasant, though outside court he
soon fell into his former licentious ways.
Preaching that physical contact with himself had a purifying and healing
effect, he obtained mistresses and tried to seduce many other women. When Nicholas II heard the accusations of
Rasputin, the czar refused to believe that he was anything less than a holy
man, and Rasputin's accusers found themselves in remote regions or removed from
their positions of influence.
By 1911 Rasputin's behavior had become a
scandal. The prime minister sent the
czar a report on Rasputin's misdeeds. As
a result, Nicholas expelled Rasputin, but Alexandra had him returned in a
matter of months. Nicholas, not wanting
to anger his wife or endanger his son, chose to ignore any more allegations of
wrongdoing.
Rasputin reached the zenith of his power in the
Russian court after the year 1915.
During World War I, Nicholas II took personal command of his troops and
went to the front, leaving Alexandra in charge of Russia's internal affairs,
with Rasputin serving as her personal advisor.
Rasputin influenced the selection of church officials and cabinet
ministers, and he occasionally intervened in military matters to Russia's
detriment.
Several attempts were made to take the life of
Rasputin and save Russia from further distress, but none were successful until
1916. Then a group of extreme
conservatives formed a conspiracy to eliminate Rasputin and save the monarchy
from further scandal. On the night of
December 29-30 (December 16-17, old style), Rasputin was invited to visit the
husband of the czar's niece's house, and once there was given wine and tea
cakes with enough poison in them to kill an elephant. When he did not die, the frantic conspirator
shot him five times, but still he lived.
They clubbed him, to no avail.
Rasputin collapsed but was able to run out into the courtyard. The conspirators then bound him and threw him
through a hole in the ice into the Neva River, where he finally died by
drowning.
The murder only strengthened Alexandra's
resolve to uphold the principle of autocracy, but only a few weeks later the
whole imperial regime was swept away by revolution. It is said that the czarina went nightly to
Rasputin's grave to pray. With the death
of the Romanov dynasty, one of Rasputin's many prophecies proved to be true.
Rasputin
was most definitely one of the main causes of the overthrow of the czarist
government and the rise of Bolshevism.
One is reminded of the great French Revolution which began in 1789. When early acts of violence were reported to
the weak French king, Louis XVI, he is to exclaimed, "Why, this is a
revolt!" A more discerning
rejoinder was, "No, sire, this is a Revolution."
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