Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Dünya Dinleri ve İktidar

Rate this book
Bu kitapta, Musevilik, Hristiyanlık, İslam, Budizm ve Hinduizm gibi yaygın dünya dinleri ele alınıyor, bu dinlerin doğuşu ve gelişimi etraflı olarak inceleniyor. Bir yandan, belli başlı tüm dinsel geleneklerin ortaya çıktığı tarihsel ve toplumsal koşullar, dönemin egemenlik ilişkileri çerçevesinde ele alınırken; öte yandan, dinsel düşünce ve inanç sistemleri ile modern ideolojiler –en başta da Marksizm– arasındaki özgül ilişkiler mercek altına alınıyor. Marksizmin din eleştirisi konusunda burjuva Aydınlanması ile ayrıştığı noktalar; Sovyetler Birliği’nden Küba’ya ve Çin’e, reel sosyalizm deneyiminin dinsel ideoloji ve kurumlarla ilişkisi ve daha pek çok konu, karşılaştırmalı ve eleştirel bir gözle ele alınıyor.

Dünya Dinleri ve İktidar, hem dünya dinlerinin tarihi, hem de dinin günümüz toplumundaki yeri hakkında ezilenlerin bakış açısından yazılmış bir kitap arayanlar için eşsiz bir kaynak.

352 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1986

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Paul N. Siegel

15 books2 followers
Paul Noah Siegel (1916, Paterson, New Jersey – 2004) was an American Marxist, a Professor emeritus of English and a distinguished Shakespeare scholar. And he is the author of several books on those subjects [...]

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
19 (34%)
4 stars
24 (43%)
3 stars
11 (20%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Phil Webster.
164 reviews2 followers
April 9, 2026
The picture painted by the capitalist media and education system of the relationship between Marxism and religion generally goes something like this:

(1) Marxists are atheists.

(2) Religion was/is suppressed under “Marxist” regimes such as the USSR, China etc.

(3) Marxists see religion as a tool used by the ruling class to brainwash the masses into accepting their exploitation.

(4) Marx described religion as “the opium of the people”.

In this excellent book, Paul Siegel sets the record straight on these matters.

The first of the above propositions is generally true. Marxists do indeed look for materialist explanations of natural and social phenomena. But on the second point, genuine Marxists, including Marx, Engels and Lenin, did not and do not seek to ban religion. The suppression of religion in Russia, Eastern Europe, China etc was carried out by Stalinist regimes which called themselves Marxist, but were/are actually bureaucratic state capitalist tyrannies which had nothing to do with genuine Marxism.

Marxists aim to achieve a democratic workers’ state, leading ultimately to a classless society. Siegel shows that Marxists argue for the separation of church and state, and for people to be free to follow whatever religion they choose. But Marxists also believe that in a classless society religion will wither away, because people will not feel the need for it any more. (I always think of John Lennon’s “Imagine” in relation to this.)

On the third point, it is certainly true that religion has often been a useful ideological tool for ruling classes, as is the case, for example, with the doctrine of the “Divine Right of Kings”. Obey the King or you’ll go to hell! And the great American rebel Joe Hill pointed out that religion conned people into believing that you’ll get “pie in the sky when you die”.

But Siegel also shows that Marxists understand that on some occasions religion can inspire the oppressed to rebel. In the English Civil War King Charles believed that he ruled by divine right, but on the other side the revolutionary parliamentarians were also inspired by their different version of Christianity. And it is obvious that the Christianity of Martin Luther King was a very different thing from the “Christianity” of Donald Trump. In fact, Marxists often work alongside progressive religious people in campaigns against racism, Islamophobia etc.

In relation to the fourth point above, the quotation actually goes like this:

“Religious suffering is at one and the same time the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.”

Here, Marx is saying that it is not just a case of the oppressed being brainwashed by the ruling class. It is also the case that people understandably turn to religion as a comfort. This reinforces the Marxist argument that religion cannot and should not be banned. The solution is to create a just society in which people will no longer feel the need for a false comfort.

From Enlightenment philosophers to present-day atheists of the Richard Dawkins type, many anti-religious people have spent their time directly attacking religion for being unscientific, irrational and reactionary. Marxists agree with many of these criticisms of religion. But they do not waste much time directly attacking religion. Instead they fight to achieve a better society and thus remove the root cause of people’s need for religion. (The other function of religion - as an “explanation” of things that humans do not understand - is already in retreat as scientific knowledge advances.)

Siegel also shows that:

(a) Morality is a social product. That which is called morally “good” is actually what is good for society, or, in a class society, what is good for a particular social class.

(b) Religious belief is a form of alienation, which means that people are dominated by their own creations. As Marx wrote in “Capital”, “As, in religion, man is governed by the products of his own brain, so in capitalist production, he is governed by the products of his own hand.”

Finally, as well as discussing all these general points with great clarity, Siegel also gives us a run through the social history of the world’s major religions, using the Marxist method of analysis.

I thoroughly recommend this book.
186 reviews
November 27, 2024
Excellent Marxist account of the historical development of religious ideas and practices. Impressively spans thousands of years across the globe. Explains both sides of Marx's recognition that religion could be both 'the opium of the masses' and 'the heart in the heartless world - the sigh of the oppressed.'
Profile Image for Ethan.
18 reviews
July 28, 2025
A great Marxist history of religion, showing its contradictory nature as both a vehicle for the revolutionary struggle for liberation and a rampart of reaction.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews