Igor Nikolaevich Andrushkevich ( July 31, 1927 , Belgrade ) is a Russian public figure, publicist, journalist and political scientist living in Argentina .
Content
Biography
Born July 31, 1927 in Belgrade in the family of Colonel Nikolai Alexandrovich Andrushkevich and Nadezhda Leonardovna Verzhenskaya. He was baptized in the Russian Church Abroad .
He studied at an elementary school in Chachka , in 1938 he entered the 1st Russian Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich cadet corps in the White Church.
In 1948, he emigrated to Argentina with his mother, two younger sisters and a younger brother. Lives in Buenos Aires . Received journalistic and philosophical education.
In the 1950s, he was a member of the editorial board of the newspaper "Frente Comun" [1] .
In 1962-1987 he worked at private metallurgical plants in the Argentine capital as financial and administrative director.
In 1958 he married Anna Bauquiero. From this marriage has three sons. They all speak Russian.
In the 1960-1970s, he was a member of the diocesan council of the Argentine and Paraguay diocese of the Russian Church Abroad, a member of the board of the Russian Orthodox Congregation in Argentina, and personal secretary of the Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentine and Paraguay Leontius (Filippovich) .
In 1970-1995 it was published in the Russian-language weekly monarchist newspaper Our Country . In 1982 he joined the editorial board of the newspaper.
For more than 30 years he taught the history of Russia and state studies at the Russian Saturday gymnasium of the Organization of Russian Young Intelligence Buenos Aires. He regularly gives public reports and lectures on various issues of world and Russian history, philosophy, politics and economics.
For about 30 years he was a parishioner of the Sergievsky parish in Vizh-Bazhester, but in 2007, in connection with the departure of the church priest, he returned to the parish of the Resurrection Cathedral [2] .
Since 1991 - Chairman of the Association of Cadets of the Russian Cadet Corps in Argentina.
In 1994, he completed his many years of work, entitled “Macro-Politics (Theory of Politics)”, consisting of 24 chapters, in three parts: the state, political models and doctrines, and the best state. However, the author failed to publish this book.
In 1995, he resumed publication in Buenos Aires of the quarterly newsletter Cadet Letter, founded in 1955 and closed in 1962.
Since 1998 he has been publishing Russian Notebooks. Independent Journal of Russian Political Thought.
In 2002, together with his wife, he began publishing the historiosophical magazine in Spanish, Perspectives. In the same 2002, he was appointed executive editor of the annual magazine " Cadet Roll Call ".
In January 2009, he participated in the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church as a delegate from the laity of the South American Diocese of the Russian Church Abroad.
On August 23, 2010, Archbishop Mark of Yegoryevsk (Golovkov) was awarded the Order of the Holy Blessed Prince Daniil of Moscow, III Degree “into consideration for the efforts to strengthen church unity” [3] .
Publications
- Macrohistory (Novosibirsk, 1992)
- The Great Troubles (Buenos Aires, 1995)
- Symphony (Buenos Aires, 1995)
- “Education of Russian military youth” (Buenos Aires, 1999).
Notes
- ↑ Kublitsky Russian periodicals in Argentina
- ↑ "We must show correctness and patience for schismatics." Conversation with I. N. Andrushkevich, publicist and public figure of the Russian diaspora / Orthodoxy. Ru
- ↑ August 24, 2010 On holding a round table in “Buenos Aires” “COUNTERPARTERS AND THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH: EXPERIENCE OF WORKING IN LATIN AMERICA” - Archive 2010