Abstract.
The author, having studied in detail the regional press publications of the 1920s, analyzes the youth’s religiousness level and its forms in North Ossetia, researches the first generation of the soviet youth, who grew up in religious families and the atheistic state, and also the ways of the influence of the latter on the youth, shows the diverse religious landscape of the republic during the period under consideration, and pays special attention to the anti-religious activity of Komsomol and the Atheists’ Union.
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