In a regretful letter penned a few months before his
death, Mikhail Kalashnikov, the designer of the AK-47 assault rifle,
asked the head of the Russian Orthodox Church if he was to blame for the
deaths of those killed by his weapon.
The Russian daily Izvestia
on Monday published the letter, in which Kalashnikov, who died last
month at 94, told Patriarch Kirill that he kept asking himself if he was
responsible. The AK-47 is the world's most popular firearm, with an
estimated 100 million around the world."The pain in my soul is unbearable. I keep asking myself the same unsolvable question: If my assault rifle took people's lives, it means that I, Mikhail Kalashnikov ... son of a farmer and Orthodox Christian am responsible for people's deaths," he said in the letter.
The rifle's simplicity and reliability made it a weapon of choice for Third World insurgents backed by the Soviet Union.
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