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May-June issue: The Witness and Wisdom of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

May-June issue: The Witness and Wisdom of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article Solzhenitsyn’s History of Russia In The Red Wheel, a...
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March-April issue: Shakespeare and Cervantes

March-April issue: Shakespeare and Cervantes

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article The Quixotic Catholic Hailed by many as both the...
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January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life

January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article Meeting Socrates: Educating Modern Philosophers Have any of you...
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November-December issue: Europe and the Culture of Christendom
September-October Issue: Shamrock, Thistle, Daffodil and Rose: The Cultures of the British Isles

Tradition is For Everyone

Why is tradition truly inclusive and truly representative of all peoples and all races of humanity? Tradition is For Everyone...
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The Good, the True and the Ugly

Does the pursuit of goodness and truth demand the recognition of ugliness? The Good, the True and the Ugly -...
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The St. Austin Review

The St. Austin Review (StAR) is an international journal of Catholic culture, literature, and ideas. In its pages, printed every two months, some of the brightest and most vigorous minds around meet to explore the people, ideas, movements, and events that shape and misshape our world.

The Witness and Wisdom of Aleksandr Solzehnitsyn

Sample Article: Solzhenitsyn’s History of Russia

In The Red Wheel, a novelistic history of the Russian Revolution, the fictional Colonel Georgi Vorotyntsev speaks for Solzhenitsyn or, better put, is Solzhenitsyn. We know this because “in childhood he had been obsessed with Russia’s history and felt a premonition that his own future life would be bound up with it”. From his youth on, he “had craved one thing above all else: to influence his country’s history for the good, to drag or hustle uncouth Russia along the road to better things”. That effort, he believed, could succeed only if his country repented of its sins.

There was a time, according to Solzhenitsyn, when Russia remained true to the Orthodox Faith that endowed her with the gift of repentance, “which more than anything else distinguishes man from the animal world”. Not for nothing is Forgiveness Sunday (the final Sunday before Great Lent when all ask forgiveness from all) a high point on the Orthodox calendar. Dostoevsky put it this way: “We are each responsible to all for all.”

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We must not invest in the transient things of this world, the very worst of investments, but in the everlasting things of heaven. If we fight the long defeat with the things of heaven in [...]

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