“Misnamed Mormons” by Sara Noelle On

This Newsnet (BYU student newspaper) article describes the popular interest in the Russian sect. The article is available online and also below.

Russian religion claims to be branch of the Church of Jesus Christ

Two Church of Jesus Christ  missionaries were sent to investigate this cottage in Mekhzavod village in June 1998.

By Sara Noelle On NewsNet Staff Writer 1 Mar 2001

Mission president Sheridan Ted Gashler was introducing The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the mayor of a small Russian village, when upon hearing the name of the church, the mayor exclaimed, “We already have Mormons here.”

Rumors of earlier Russian “Mormons” began surfacing soon after the Russia Samara Mission opened in 1990, but were never officially acknowledged until Gashler felt inspired to send two missionaries to investigate the Mekhzavod village of the Volga River area in June 1998.

The missionaries were told by locals that these people called “Mormons” did not drink alcohol or smoke tobacco, had strong family ties, helped the poor and wore white at funerals, said James Scott, 22, a junior from Spokane, Washington, majoring in international business.

Scott, who served in the Russia Samara Mission from 1997 to 1999, was one the two missionaries originally sent to Mekhzavod.

There were also claims that a large, hand-written, red-covered book entitled “The Book of Mormon” had been preserved through the generations, Scott said.

Eric Eliason, BYU folklorist and ethnographer, specializing in American religious movements, encouraged Gary Browning, BYU professor of Russian and a former mission president in Russia, to participate in a research trip to Russia.

Together they went to Russia in April and May of 2000 to investigate the possibility of members of the Church of Jesus Christ in pre-1990 Russia, according to a report by Browning and Eliason.

They visited four cities: Barnaul and Omsk in Siberia, Orenburg in the Ural Mountains and Samara of the Volga River area, Browning said.

“These were places where there had been rumors that old-time ‘Mormons’ existed before the missionaries arrived,” Browning said.

“Based on what we had heard and read before our trip, we assumed the ‘Mormon’ groups could have arisen through one or a combination of the following four possibilities: missionaries, (church) materials, migration or misnomer,” Browning said.

Either way, Eliason said he was sure it would be an interesting project.

In the course of their field studies in Russia, however, Eliason and Browning found no connection between the subjects of his study and the Church of Jesus Christ — except in the nickname.

“We didn’t uncover any evidence at all that these religious groups were connected to the LDS Church,” Eliason said, although, on the surface, there appeared to be some similarities.

Eliason said the missionaries were reasonable to assume a connection between these Russian “Mormons” and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

So how did the term “Mormon” become associated with these Russian religious groups?

“On the basis of what we found, it appears that over the years, the term ‘Mormon’ came to be used to refer to dissident groups, that is, non-orthodox groups (in Russia),” Browning said.

Eliason said the Church of Jesus Christ was better known in the late 19th century.

“(American) Mormons were in the news on a very regular basis because of our conflict with the federal government,” Eliason said.

“The practice now of Russia using the term ‘Mormon’ to refer to small, religious groups is left over from the 19th Century,” he said.

Meanwhile, Tania Rands Lyon, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Princeton University, was in Russia for eight months during 1998 doing research on Russian families for her dissertation.

“I first heard this story from a pair of missionaries over a homemade burrito dinner on the Fourth of July.

“I knew well that no LDS missionaries had ever proselytized in the countryside, so how could there be any Mormons in a place like Bogdanovka?” Lyon said in an article to be published in “Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought.”

Intrigued by this story, Lyon made two brief trips to Samara and met in a confidential interview with an older-practicing Samara Mormon named Nadia.

Her interview would be an important contribution to Eliason and Browning’s research, because it was difficult to find members of these Russian religious groups who were willing to discuss their faith.

Nadia claimed she did not know the origin of her faith, but it was simply how she was raised, Lyon said.

“Whether or not the two religions had the same origins, she believed her religion to be very different from ours,” Lyon said.

As a folklorist Eliason was interested in researching the culture and oral stories that surround these isolated Russian religious groups.

“Missionaries returning from Russia had been telling stories of groups of ‘Mormons’ that had been in Russia since before the LDS Church got there,” Eliason said.

The study of the Russian “Mormons” will continue as Scott travels for three weeks in April and May to Samara to conduct more field studies in a project funded by ORCA, a research grant offered to undergraduate students.

“Written evidence is really scanty at this point,” Scott said. “We’re all just guessing. We don’t really know.”

Scott said he hopes to document this religion he feels may soon disappear because there are only a few of these religious groups left.

“There’s a whole religion scattered across Russia that no one knows anything about and that may disappear in a year or a generation,” Scott said.

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