Bezbozhnik u Stanka (Russian: «Безбожник у станка», lit.
'The Godless at the Workbench') was a monthly and later biweekly antireligious magazine of the Moscow Committee of the AUCP(b).
On its pages the questions of socialist construction, culture, anti-religious propaganda in the USSR were highlighted in a popular form, the connection of religious organizations with the exploiting classes was revealed.
[3] The first edition of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia reports that the magazine from the moment of its appearance began to penetrate abroad, especially to America, and met with lively interest from the workers; 1924, in the House of Lords, the Archbishop of Canterbury protested against the distribution of the magazine in England, saying that the Bolsheviks "encroached on the highest achievement of human culture" – on religion; from the spring of 1925 the magazine in England was banned.
[4] However, in publications and illustrations of the magazine, often brutal attacks against religion were made, which offended the religious feelings of believers.