The Baton and the Cross has been longlisted for the Ondaatje Prize and shortlisted for both the Orwell Prize and Pushkin House Book Prize

 

The Baton and the Cross

Russia’s Church from Pagans to Putin

For more than a millennium, the Russian Orthodox Church has shown astonishing survival skills - from the Mongol yoke to tsarist demagoguery and enlightenment, from Soviet atheism to the chaotic 1990s. Now again, it is at the right hand of power, sanctifying Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine.

In this provocative new book, Lucy Ash reveals how, under Putin, religion is being stripped of its spiritual content and used as a weapon to control the population. Orthodox clerics and their acolytes distort theology as they preach Slav Christian supremacy and drag Russia backwards into a new Middle Ages.

A vivid picture of the ways seismic moments of Russia’s religious past are reverberating today
— The Financial Times
Her extensive reading, linguistic gifts and objectivity make this an important book
— Literary Review
 
 
 
 

Related articles

The Tablet

Putin's Culture Wars
by Lucy Ash

 

The Moscow Times

How the War in Ukraine Split the Orthodox Church
by Lucy Ash

 

The New European

Putin’s hotline to God
by Lucy Ash

 
 

Media appearances

The Geopolitics of the Russian Orthodox Church with Lucy Ash

Dave Troy interviews noted British journalist and documentarian Lucy Ash about her new book, The Baton and the Cross: Russia's Church from Pagans to Putin.

 

Lucy interviewed on BBC News Ukraine.

 

Lucy on Times Radio as she discusses her new book The Baton and The Cross.

 

Sunday
Lucy Ash talks to William Crawley.
1st December 2024

 

Start the Week
Timothy Snyder, Oksana Maksymchuk and Lucy Ash discuss tyranny and freedom in the US, Russia and Ukraine, with Tom Sutcliffe.
16th September 2024

 

Ukraine: The Latest

How the Russian Orthodox Church became a vital force in Putin’s existential war against Ukraine.

 
 

Events

Pushkin House Book Prize 2025 Award Ceremony

Thursday 19th June 2025
6:30—10.00pm

The evening will include illuminating discussions with the shortlisted authors – including Lucy – and distinguished judges, a stand-up performance by Vladimir Raevskiy, a speech by Ekaterina Schulmann, and a reception-style dinner presented by Zima.

This year’s ceremony will be held at The Foundling Museum in Bloomsbury, London from 6:30pm to 10pm. It will be hosted by Andrew Jack, founder of the Prize, and Elena Sudakova, Executive Director of Pushkin House.

Pushkin House