It was "discouraged"
The Soviet government no longer exists. When it did, it did not support the Russian Orthodox Church. The Soviet government was anti-religion and discouraged organized religion of any kind, even though it claimed tolerance.
They wanted the government to be supreme athoritayyy
A:The communists thought Christianity might form an organised base from which to attack the power of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union. For this reason, they thought that atheism, the absence of religion, should be promoted. However, during the war Stalin realised that the Church could actually be of positive help to the state in mobilising public support for the defence of the nation. After the war, it soon became clear that Christian churches would continue to be of help in furthering the Soviet state's post-war political agenda. Thus, communism's support for atheism was less about disapproval of religion than about pragmatism, just as was its support in other times for the Christian Church.
false (A+)
To prevent different ethnic groups from identifying with their individual cultures rather than with the soviet union , the soviet government outlawed many cultural celebrations.
The Soviet government no longer exists. When it did, it did not support the Russian Orthodox Church. The Soviet government was anti-religion and discouraged organized religion of any kind, even though it claimed tolerance.
They wanted the government to be supreme athoritayyy
The Communist government of East Germany with the support of the Soviet Union.
A:The communists thought Christianity might form an organised base from which to attack the power of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union. For this reason, they thought that atheism, the absence of religion, should be promoted. However, during the war Stalin realised that the Church could actually be of positive help to the state in mobilising public support for the defence of the nation. After the war, it soon became clear that Christian churches would continue to be of help in furthering the Soviet state's post-war political agenda. Thus, communism's support for atheism was less about disapproval of religion than about pragmatism, just as was its support in other times for the Christian Church.
It was banned, and people who were caught practicing religion were punished severly, because they feared that religion would distract the citizens from total loyalty and submission to the government.
Chernobyl wad the nuclear power plant, built by the Soviet Union. It was near the city if Pripyat, which was built in 1979 by the Soviet government to support the power plant.
false (A+)
Farmers had to cultivate the lands of the government and the religion. Commoners also had to supply labor for state projects.
An accommodationist.
To prevent different ethnic groups from identifying with their individual cultures rather than with the soviet union , the soviet government outlawed many cultural celebrations.
At the time, the Hungarian government was a Soviet puppet. When the people rebelled against the government, the Soviets sent troops to support the government so that Hungary would stay in the Soviet sphere of influence.
After the Soviet Union collapsed, huge openings formed in Europe. Many Christian missionaries went all throughout former soviet-europe and russia sharing the Gospel. The government invited Christians into schools, encouraged church-planting, and was very positive toward missionaries because they had been so deprived of religion during the soviet rule. Thousands of people became Christians in Europe after the Soviet Union collapsed.