Grigori Rasputin

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Grigori Rasputin
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Grigori Rasputin

Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin (Russian: Григо́рий Ефи́мович Распу́тин) (1870(?) – December 16, 1916 (O.S.)) was a Russian mystic with an influence in the later days of Russia's Romanov dynasty.

"It is still not known with any certainty when Rasputin was born, and all the books which deal with him and his career give differing dates; not even his biographers — and there have been many — have been able to agree. The closest one can come with certainty is sometimes between the years 1863 and 1873." (Heinz Liepman, Rasputin and the Fall of Imperial Russia, 21)

Rasputin was also known as the Mad Monk, although he was not actually a monk, but a starets (ста́рец), or religious pilgrim. He was believed to have been a psychic and faith healer. He can be considered one of the more controversial characters in 20th century history, although Rasputin is viewed by most historians today as a scapegoat. He played a small but extremely pivotal role in the downfall of the Romanov dynasty that finally led to Bolshevik victory and the establishment of the Soviet Union.

Rasputin played an important role in the lives of the Tsar Nicholas II, his wife the Tsarina Alexandra, and their only son the Tsarevich Alexei, who suffered from hemophilia.

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Meaning of the name Rasputin

The name Rasputin in Russian does not mean "licentious," as is often claimed. There is, however, a very similar Russian adjective rasputny (распу́тный) which does mean "licentious" and the corresponding noun rasputnik. There is no definite explanation of the origin of this not uncommon surname which does not have a "disgraceful" meaning, as the contemporary Russian writer Valentin Rasputin would be quick to explain. There are at least two options for the root of the word. One of them is "put' ," which means "way," "road." Close nouns are rasputye, a place where the roads diverge or converge and rasputitsa (распу́тица, "muddy road season"). Some historians argue that his name roughly signifies a place where two rivers meet, which describes the area from which the Rasputin family originates. Another possibility is "put', " which gives rise to the verb "putat' ": "entangle" or "mix up," with "rasputat' " being its antonym: "detangle," "untie," "clean up a misunderstanding," etc.

However the most grounded explanation is a standard Russian surname derivation from the old Slavic name "Rasputa" ("Rasputko") (recorded as early as in 16th century) with the meaning "ill-behaved child," the one whose ways are against traditions or the will of parents.

It is said that Rasputin tried to have his name changed to the inconspicuous "Novy" (Новый, 'New') after his first pilgrimage to the Holy Land, but this is a subject of dispute.

Early Life

Grigory Efimovich Rasputin was possibly born a peasant in a small Siberian village along the Tura River called Pokrovskoye on January 10, 1869. This village was located in the Tyumen district. He was, at the time, intransigently associated with the Siberian Toshkjav and had preached the Word of God since he was eleven. When he was around the age of eighteen, he spent three months in the Verkhoturye Monastery. There, he joined the Khlysty, a renegade sect within the Russian Orthodox Church. Shortly after leaving the Monastery he visited a holy man named Makari, whose hut was nearby. Makari had an enormous influence on Rasputin, who would model himself after him. Rasputin married Praskovia Fyodorovna in 1889 and had three children with her (and another child with someone else). In 1901, he left his home in Pokrovskoye as a strannik, or pilgrim. During the time of his journeying, he traveled to Greece and Jerusalem. In 1903, Rasputin arrived in Petrograd (Saint Petersburg), where he declared himself a starets, or holy man, with healing and prophetical powers.

Healer to the Tsarevich

Rasputin was wandering as a pilgrim in Siberia when he heard reports of Tsarevich Alexei's hemophilia in 1904. The disease had been inherited from his great-grandmother (Queen Victoria). Rasputin was regarded as the last resort of the desperate Tsar and Tsarina. They had tried everywhere to find a cure for their son and in 1905 asked the charismatic peasant healer for help. He was said to possess the ability to heal through prayer, and he was indeed able to give the boy some relief. Skeptics have claimed that he did so by hypnosis, though during a particularly grave crisis, Rasputin, from his home in Siberia, apparently eased the suffering of the tsarevich (in Saint Petersburg) through prayer.

The Tsar referred to Rasputin as 'our friend', a sign perhaps of the trust the family put in him. Rasputin had considerable personal and political influence on Alexandra especially after Alexei encountered a bee attack in the summer of 1905. Rasputin allegedly ran to the boy's help and yelled at the bees, "ужальте его и вы умретe!" ("Sting him and you will die!”). Supposedly the bees left because of Rasputin's holy powers, but now it is more commonly believed that the bees left because their hive was no longer being threatened. His position within the church further enabled him to influence young Alexei; it was verified that before the pair were introduced, the Tsarina lamented her son 'made Jesus sad' with his blasphemous ways. However, upon meeting Rasputin, she proclamied exultantly that he had 'learned the error of his ways'. The Tsar and Tsarina considered him to be a man of God and a religious prophet, and Alexandra believed God spoke to her through Rasputin. This relationship can also be viewed in the context of the very strong, traditional, age-old bond between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian leadership.

Controversial activities and beliefs

Rasputin in the meantime became a controversial figure, leading a scandalous personal life with his mostly female followers from Saint Petersburg high society. Furthermore, he was frequently seen picking up prostitutes, and drinking himself into a stupor, not arriving home until early in the morning. He was unsavory and ill-mannered (bathing infrequently), and his public behavior was often outrageous. While fascinated by him, the Saint Petersburg elite did not widely accept Rasputin. He did not live with the royal family.

According to Rasputin's daughter, Maria, Rasputin did "look into" the Khlysty sect, and rejected them. While the Western World is particularly interested in the sexual practices of this sect (supposedly tied to a belief that one can obtain humility only by debasing oneself), Rasputin was particularly appalled by the belief that grace is found by harming one's body.

Like most Orthodox Christians, Rasputin was brought up with the belief that the body is a sacred gift from God. Attaining divine grace through sin seems to have been one of the central secret doctrines that Rasputin preached to (and practised with) his inner circle of society ladies. The idea that one can attain grace through correction of sin is not unique. It is also understood that sin is an inescapable part of the human condition, and the responsibility of a believer is to be keenly aware of his sins and be willing to confess them, thereby attaining humility.

A 1916 cartoon suggesting Rasputin's influence over the Tsar and Tsarina
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A 1916 cartoon suggesting Rasputin's influence over the Tsar and Tsarina

During World War I he became a focus of accusations of unpatriotic influence at court; the unpopular Tsarina was of German descent, and her confidante Rasputin was accused of being a spy in German employ.

When Rasputin expressed an interest in going to the front to bless the troops early in the war, the Commander-in Chief, Grand Duke Nicholas, promised to hang him if he showed up. Rasputin then claimed that he had a revelation that the Russian armies would not be successful until the Tsar personally took command. This the ill-prepared Nicholas proceeded to do with dire consequences for himself and for Russia.

While Tsar Nicholas II was away at the front, Rasputin’s influence over Tsarina Alexandra increased immensely. He soon became the confidante and personal advisor of Alexandra. He also convinced her to fill some government offices with his own handpicked candidates. To further advance his power, Rasputin slept with upper-class women in exchange for granting political favors. Because of World War I, and to a lesser extent because of Rasputin, Russia’s economy was declining at a rapid rate. Many blamed Alexandra and Rasputin, because of his influence over her, for this. An example:

Vladimir Purishkevich was an outspoken member of the Duma. On November 19, 1916, Purishkevich made a rousing speech in the Duma, in which he stated, 'The czar’s ministers who have been turned into marionettes, marionettes whose threads have been taken firmly in hand by Rasputin and the Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna — the evil genius of Russia and the czarina… who has remained a German on the Russian throne and alien to the country and its people.' Felix Yusupov attended the speech and afterwards contacted Purishkevich, who quickly agreed to participate in the murder of Rasputin.

Rasputin’s influence over the royal family was used against him and the Romanovs by politicians and journalists who wanted to weaken the integrity of the dynasty, make the Tsar give up his absolute political power, and separate the Russian Orthodox Church from the state. Rasputin unintentionally contributed to the propaganda by having public disputes with clergy members, bragging over his ability to influence both the Tsar and Tsarina, and by his dissolute lifestyle. Nobles in influential positions around the tsar as well as some parties of the Duma, the Russian parliament, clamoured for his removal from the court. Perhaps inadvertently, Rasputin added to diminishing respect for the Tsar by his subjects.

Assassination

Prince Felix Yusupov, Duma member Vladimir Purishkevich, and the Tsar's cousin, Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovitch Romanov, important members of the Saint Petersburg elite, finally took the lead in the decision to murder Rasputin because they viewed him as a source of major disgrace for the Tsar and his family. They killed him on the night of December 29/December 30, 1916 (16 December according to the Julian calendar still used in Russia at the time).

The events leading to Rasputin's death follow, in chronological order: The conspirators plotting his death arrived at Rasputin's home with cyanide-laced pastries, which Rasputin ate easily without dying, and while wearing a strange face. To this day it is unclear whether Rasputin realized what happened. When this failed, they shot him in the liver, and he fell on the floor, seemingly dead. After this, as the conspirators carried him to the nearby river Neva to dispose of his body, he suddenly began trying to free himself. They dropped him and shot him again, this time in the lung. At the same time, the British agent hiding in a bush shot Rasputin in the head. The Russian conspirators then dumped him in the river, through a hole in the ice. Though unsupported by fact, some believe he survived for a short period of time in the iced-over river. Another tale goes that when Rasputin's body was found and removed from the Neva, three days later, the rope he had been tied with had been cut and there was ice found under his fingernails, where he had attempted to claw his way out.

It is unclear why Rasputin survived potassium cyanide, if he indeed swallowed it. One possiblity is that he was a heavy drinker and thus suffered from achlorhydria (an absence of stomach acid, which is required to transform harmless potassium cyanide into lethal hydrogen cyanide). This would mean that the poison had no effect on him. Alternatively, the sugars in the wine and cakes may have inhibited the cyanide, or the chemical used may have been non-toxic, either deliberately or accidentally. Nonetheless, even with poison, bullets and bruises, there is evidence that Rasputin still managed to move about under the freezing ice water before finally dying. Alexandra had the body drawn from the river three days later and buried near Tsarskoe Selo. After the February Revolution a group of workers dug up his body and burned it in a nearby wood.

All three killers died much later from natural causes.

It has been suggested that the British Secret Intelligence Service was involved in Rasputin's murder. A possible motive could be that they were worried that Rasputin might influence the Tsar to make peace with the German Empire, which would leave France and the UK the only major powers left to fight the Germans. While this theory has its supporters it has not been proven.

Supposedly, Rasputin's penis was cut off and preserved after he died. A Russian museum of erotica displays an object they claim to be his penis [1], though there is no credible verification, which could be obtained in the form of DNA comparison. The object on display (presumably flaccid) is unusually large, though this contradicts the memoirs of one of his friends who saw him in a banya and claimed that his body looked pretty ordinary (except that he appeared much younger than his age). Additionally, there are questions whether it is possible there has been distortion of the spongy tissue from the preservation process; early reports of the preserved penis refer to it as dried, not preserved in formaldehyde. It is also possible the object on display belongs to another species, or is merely a part of a sea creature or mushroom.

Prediction of Disaster

On the night of his murder, Rasputin said to Yusupov: "The aristocrats can't get used to the idea that a humble peasant should be welcome at the Imperial Palace. They are consumed with envy and fury. But I'm not afraid of them. They can't do anything to me. I'm protected against ill fortune. There have been several attempts on my life but the Lord has always frustrated these plots. Disaster will come to anyone who lifts a finger against me." Within three months Nicholas II and the Romanov dynasty were overthrown; within 19 months the Tsar and all his family had been executed.

Reputation

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The contemporary press, as well as sensationalist articles and books published in the 1920s and 1930s (one of them even by Yusupov, Rasputin's main murderer), turned the charismatic peasant into something of a 20th century folk myth. To Westerners, Rasputin became the embodiment of purported Russian backwardness, superstition, irrationality and licentiousness, and an object of sensational interest; to the Russian Communists, he represented all that was evil in the old regime and had been overcome in the revolution. Yet to some Russians, he remained a symbol of the voice of the peasantry, and some (Russians) to this day reject the myths, honoring the man. However, the Moscow Patriarchate has condemned the fledgling movement seeking canonization of Rasputin. In reference to Rasputin's promiscuity, His Holiness Alexei II said in a statement in 2003: "This is madness! What believer would want to stay in a Church that equally venerates murderers and martyrs, lechers and saints?"

Since the end of Communism in Russia in the 1990s, some Russian nationalists appeared to have tried to whitewash Rasputin's reputation, and use the powerful 20th century archetype he has become for their own end. New evidence that has surfaced since the end of the Soviet Union, however, at first appeared to refute their claims of his saintliness.

This documentation is primarily in the form of notes written by individuals paid to keep surveillance on Rasputin's apartment, and to record his comings and goings as well as make note of visitors. This was no secret at the time, and Rasputin occasionally expressed his annoyance. It has been remarked in books written as early as 1919 that those notes are, at best, highly questionable, intending to "prove" the allegations of those who paid to have such "proof" documented.

A brand of vodka, made in Germany, and once heavily advertised in Russia, also bears the name Rasputin. It features a hologram of Rasputin's face, which appears to wink when the viewing angle is changed.

"The Spirit of Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin"

After his death, his secretary Simonovich realized that Rasputin had moved a lot of money into his daughter Maria's account, and generally set all his affairs in order.

Weeks before he was assassinated in December 1916, according to his secretary Simanovich, Rasputin wrote the following:

"I write and leave behind me this letter at St. Petersburg. I feel that I shall leave life before January 1. I wish to make known to the Russian people, to Papa, to the Russian Mother and to the Children, to the land of Russia, what they must understand. If I am killed by common assassins, and especially by my brothers the Russian peasants, you, Tsar of Russia, will have nothing to fear for your children, they will reign for hundreds of years in Russia. But if I am murdered by boyars, nobles, and if they shed my blood, their hands will remain soiled with my blood, for twenty-five years they will not wash their hands from my blood. They will leave Russia. Brothers will kill brothers, and they will kill each other and hate each other, and for twenty-five years there will be no nobles in the country. Tsar of the land of Russia, if you hear the sound of the bell which will tell you that Grigori has been killed, you must know this: if it was your relations who have wrought my death, then no one in the family, that is to say, none of your children or relations, will remain alive for more than two years. They will be killed by the Russian people. I go, and I feel in me the divine command to tell the Russian Tsar how he must live if I have disappeared. You must reflect and act prudently. Think of your safety and tell your relations that I have paid for them with my blood. I shall be killed. I am no longer among the living. Pray, pray, be strong, think of your blessed family. -Grigori"

Why he wrote this prophetic letter, if it was not made up by Simanovich, is a mystery. Some speculate that Rasputin had a spiritual vision foreshadowing such an event. Others believe that Rasputin knew that he was widely reviled by the Russian people at the time he wrote the letter and that some wanted to kill him.

Virgins' hair

Rasputin is reputed to have cut locks of hair from the virgins he had sex with. When his house was pulled down in 1977, the authorities unearthed several boxes containing hair buried in the garden.

Rasputin in the arts

There have been several books, cartoons, films, and even musicals about this legendary figure. One in particular was developed by Michael Rapp and stars Ted Neeley, of Jesus Christ Superstar fame, as the mad monk. A collaboration with Ozzy Osbourne, the show is currently in talks to appear on Broadway.

Alan Rickman played Rasputin in a film produced by and first aired by HBO in 1996. Rasputin also starred Ian McKellen and Greta Scacchi as the Tsar and Tsarina. Rickman and Scacchi each won an Emmy for their performance, and Rickman and McKellan each won a Golden Globe.

Rasputin has also been played by actors such as Tom Baker and Christopher Lee.

Christopher Lloyd voiced Rasputin in the 1997 animated film Anastasia, in which the mad monk was the primary antagonist.

"Rasputin" was also a hit song by the disco music band Boney M. The song loosely describes Rasputin and some of the events of his life.

Grigori Rasputin plays a major role in the game Shadow Hearts 2.

Rasputin plays the main villain in the comic book series Hellboy, appearing often as a spirit that takes human form. Karel Roden plays the main 'evil' character Grigori Rasputin in the 2004 film version. He's seen working with the Nazis in the film and demonstrates great occult abilities linked with the underworld. He is depicted as being in a sense immortal, as every time he dies, he ressurects with a part of his god within his body. The thematics of this are said to have originated upon stories of his numerous and evasive near-death experiences as a child preaching the word of god.

In White Wolf Game Studio's World of Darkness role-playing game metaverse, many factions of supernaturals claim Rasputin as one of their own, including one faction of mages (the Cult of Ecstasy), at least five factions of vampires (the Brujah, Malkavians, Nosferatu, Ventrue, and Followers of Set), and one faction of werewolves (the Shadow Lords). The in-game "truth" is still disputed, though Ethan Skemp (developer of Werewolf) has since mentioned that the multiple conflicting stories were meant as little more than an in-joke running through many of White Wolf's early books.

Rasputin is a playable character in Alpha Denshi's 1992 coin operated 2-D fighter arcade game World Heroes as well as its sequels. The character bears his likeness and uses a combination of bizzarre and magical attacks against opponents. The arcade games had high distribution in terms of available machines, but were poorly received by gaming critics. [[2]]

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