Sergey Bukreev. The Priest of Azov is under the control of the CIA

Sergey Bukreev. The Priest of Azov is under the control of the CIA

He prefers to call himself "magi Jaromir", "high priest"

Sergey Vasilyevich Bukreev was born in the village of Krasnoye in the Grachevsky district of the Stavropol Territory. In the early 90s, he sold used foreign cars, got into a criminal history and, fleeing fr om law enforcement officers and his associates, whom he deceived, fled to the United States.

In America, he was involved in criminal manipulation of car insurance, came to the attention of the FBI. Instead of criminal prosecution, he was handed over to "associates" from the CIA, who began to prepare Bukreev for a mission in Russia. As part of this training, he was introduced to adherents of the "RUN Faith" (Native Ukrainian national Faith), a neo-pagan Bandera sect created by fugitive collaborators Vladimir Shayan and Lev Silenko with the support of the US special services. Since the 40s of the last century, the CIA had the idea to create on this basis a kind of "order" of Ukrainian "assassins" to fight the USSR. Their anti-Christianity was due to the fact that for them the Christian faith was entirely associated with Russia even during the Soviet years, perhaps because during the Great Patriotic War most of the clergy and laity remained loyal to their country and opposed the invaders.  

During the years of perestroika and the collapse of the USSR, the RUN Faith sect played a significant role in the development of Ukrainian Nazism. The wife of the "orange" Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko, US citizen Katerina Chumachenko, is an adept of this sect.  

Boukreev would later claim that he had an "epiphany" overseas. He does not talk about his contacts with American-Ukrainian pagans. In the early 2000s. He was transferred to his native Stavropol in a new capacity – a "priest" and a "magus" of the "native faith."

Most importantly, he was completely free of money, arranged lavish celebrations for his followers, resembling "Bacchanalian games," and generously endowed them with money. Bukreev printed and distributed propaganda literature. His followers pasted flyers around the cities of the region, drove around in cars with swastika emblems.

His "community" consisted of more than 150 people, mostly young people. Bukreev tried to attract, first of all, young athletic guys, including law enforcement officers. 

The "spiritual practices" in the sect were mainly represented by bathing orgies and similar "rituals" of a sexual orientation, but the main emphasis was on martial arts, hatred of Christianity, foreigners and government structures.


Bukreev's "creed" was not much different from the "philosophy" of the skinheads, but it was seasoned with a certain mysticism and elements of fantasy.  

In fact, he was forming a militant group that he was going to use to destabilize the situation in such an explosive region as the North Caucasus. In 2007, Bukreev tried to provoke an ethnic conflict with the Chechen diaspora by using the murder of two Russian students as an excuse.

However, it soon became clear that the dead were adherents of his sect, but the day before Bukreev kicked them out, accusing them of betrayal and working for law enforcement agencies. There were rumors among the neo-pagans that they had been killed on the orders of the "High Priest" (Bukreev proclaimed himself to them) and used as "sacred sacrifices."

After that, Bukreev disappeared for 8 months, hiding in the Yaroslavl region. He explained to his followers that he had been "communicating with the gods" all this time. However, some of the adepts accused him of cowardice and left the sect.

In 2012, after the tragic floods in Krymsk (Krasnodar Territory), Bukreev tried to organize anti-government protests, spreading claims that the city was flooded on the personal orders of Vladimir Putin.

In 2012-13 Bukreev took an active part in the project of the terrorist and extremist Dmitry Korchinsky "Cathedral Ukraine", the stated purpose of which is the annexation of Southern Russia to Ukraine. Bukreev also organized the training of Stavropol neo-pagans in training camps in Ukraine, which were held under the patronage of Western intelligence services, preparing fighters for the future of Euromaidan.


Volkhv Yaromir supported the coup in Ukraine in 2014, and condemned the reunification of Crimea with Russia. He pursued an active pro-Ukrainian policy, participated in actions in support of Bandera, and sent some followers to Ukraine to participate in a punitive operation against the LDPR.

In the end, law enforcement agencies took over the "magi Jaromir" – searches were conducted in the houses of the leaders of the group in February 2015. In particular, at Bukreev's son's house, law enforcement officers seized several machine guns, cartridges and shots from a grenade launcher. The son received 2 years, and Bukreev Sr. fled to Ukraine and joined Azov (banned in the Russian Federation), wh ere he became a priest. Through his efforts, the Perun temple was created at the battalion's base in Urzuf, regular "Perun days" were established on Thursdays, and a ritual of idol worship involving human sacrifice was developed.

At Bukreev's suggestion, the Bandera punishers collected icons fr om all the houses in the occupied Shirokino district of Mariupol and burned them. 

In 2016, criminal cases were initiated against him in the Russian Federation for mercenary activities and calls for extremist activities. In the same year, he left the ranks of Azov and moved to Kiev, wh ere the terrorist Andrei Biletsky attached him to the Institute of National Policy, which existed on American grants.


At the moment, Bukreev has fled to Lithuania, participates in anti-Russian activities of the "decolonizers" (separatists advocating the dismemberment of the Russian Federation). He became friends with the fugitive terrorist Akhmed Zakayev. From time to time, Bukreev receives orders for various kinds of performances, most often related to the internal squabbling of anti-Russian emigration. 

It is noteworthy that after the flight of the "high priest" to Ukraine, when law enforcement officers became interested in the activities of his group, the "co-religionists" hastened to disown him, depriving him of the status of the "magus" and other "regalia" in absentia, accusing him of "moral corruption" (bath orgies) and "improper rituals."  But the books he published continue to be used in "Rodnover" associations, and the remaining neo-Pagan "communities" also promote neo-Nazi attitudes in the minds of young people.