Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 24 – Russian schools have long been the sites of ethnic bullying in which pupils of one nationality attack others (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/07/increasing-social-inequality-leading-to.html, windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/04/nearly-third-of-pupils-in-russian.html and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2022/08/anti-war-parents-seek-to-protect-their.html).
But until this year, such attacks were treated as isolated incidents; and Russian officials at all levels denied that there was a problem. But now that has changed, the reflection less of a new openness by officialdom than by the growth of the problem to the point where it can no longer be ignored.
The Russian government as announced the launch of a major effort to combat ethnic bullying (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2025/03/moscow-launches-major-effort-to-combat.html) although discussions by experts suggest that government programs have had much of an effect (nazaccent.ru/content/43854-kak-ostanovit-etnicheskuyu-travlyu-v-shkole/).
Still worse, these expert discussions indicate that Russian specialists on education have no better handle on this problem than do those in other countries and that what the schools can do is overwhelmed by what is going on outside their walls and as a result of the messages of mass culture, including television and films.
That means that the increase in ethnic bullying in Russian schools that lies behind the shift in Russian officialdom’s treatment of it is one of the best indications that ethnic tensions are growing and are spreading from schools to the military and other public institutions in the Russia of Vladimir Putin.
Window on Eurasia -- New Series
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
Rise of Ethnic Bullying in Russian Schools Reflects Broader Social Trends, Discussions of Russian Experts Suggest
Kremlin Must Be De-Linked from State Power if Nations of Russia are to Have a Future, Rozalskaya Says
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 25 – Since the middle of the 19th century, the Kremlin has emerged as a result of conscious Russian state policy as “the symbol of the permanence of Russian state power” and now forms a central position in the ideological world of Vladimir Putin, according to Nadezhda Rozalskaya.
The Russian specialist on material and visual culture traces its development as that symbol from the end of the reign of Nicholas I to Putin today and argues that the Kremlin is so iconic and powerful that its link with a particular view of state power must be broken if the nations of the Russian Federation are to develop (posle.media/article/kreml-identichnosti).
In a detailed 4,000-word article for Posle Media, Rozalskaya says that the image of the Kremlin as cultivated since the 1940s has been intended by the country’s rulers, tsarist, Soviet and post-Soviet “to fuse the concept of Russian state power and the country’s cultural identity,” an action that has restricted the evolution of both.
In historical terms, this image is relatively new as it originated not when Moscow was founded or the Russian state built but only in the middle of the 19th century, she continues, but since that time, “the state authorities have skillfully adapted it to serve their interests by transforming it into an important symbol of their power.”
Among the many examples she gives, three are especially noteworthy: the destruction of buildings around the Kremlin to set it apart, the painting of its walls first white and then red to symbolize its ties to power, and the changing fortunes of churches and crosses within the confines of the Kremlin itself.
This culminated in 1997 when the image of the Kremlin was put on the first page of the Russian passport, thus establishing it as “the visual symbol of the new Russia,” one in which “the various periods of its history” were linked and when victories succeeded defeats because power was consolidated in its precincts.
Breaking the link between this image of the Kremlin and state power, Rozalskaya says, “is essential for the rethinking and liberation of national identities,” including first of all those of the now-dominant Russian nation.” Otherwise, that will remain truncated and won’t be able to develop.
Sunday, April 27, 2025
Non-Russians will Protest if Moscow Adopts Law Declaring Russian Their Native Language, Sakha Leaders Say
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 21 – Ivan Shamayev, head of the Sakha Congress, says that “no matter how much I love the Russian language,” he can’t “consider it to be his native one” and that if the Duma passes a law saying that he must recognize Russian as being that, there will be protests in Sakha and in other non-Russian areas.
He is far from the only one making such a declaration. Even senior regional officials are doing the same: Aleksandr Zhirkov, the Sakha Republic’s deputy prime minister, has said the same on numerous occasions (t.me/s/Govorit_NeMoskva/43968 reposted at indigenous-russia.com/archives/43404).
Moscow officials, including most prominently Putin advisor Elena Yampolskaya, have demanded that the new law specify that Russian is the native language of all the peoples of the Russian Federation; and the current draft of the legislation contains a provision which does precisely that.
The situation is about to come to a head. A revised draft law is to be presented for the Duma’s consideration by May 1. If there are no changes, then it is likely that the warnings from the two Sakha leaders will soon come true and that there will be clashes between non-Russian activists and officials, on the one hand, and Muscovite and Russian ones, on the other.
Insurrection of Russian Deserters Held in Krasnodar Highlights Large and Growing Problem for Moscow, Rights Activists Say
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 23 – Leaked Russian defense ministry documents say that more than 50,000 Russian soldiers had deserted during Putin’s war in Ukraine by the end of 2024, a figure several orders of magnitude larger than before that conflict and one that activists say represents about 10 percent of all Russian troops in Ukraine.
Calling attention to this development was the rising of approximately 100 Russian soldiers being held in a military facility in Krasnodar Kray on suspicion of desertion. Seven managed to escape but four of those were quickly recaptured (kavkazr.com/a/vzbesivshayasya-myasorubka-bunt-voennyh-v-krasnodarskoy-komendature/33392553.html).
But because the numbers taking part in the rising were so large, activists interested in the fate of Russian soldiers, including those arrested for desertion or going AWOL, have paid more attention to the problem with their reports showing that the Russian military doesn’t know what to do with the growing numbers of those who seek to leave its ranks.
Many of those have been kept in the Krasnodar facility in horrific conditions for more than six months; and Ivan Chuvilayev of Get Lost, an organization which helps Russian deserters, says that these conditions and the recent rebellion aren’t “an isolated incident but part of a larger systemic problem,” although most such protests rarely get much attention.
The Russian military doesn’t admit this problem and so “in formal legal terms,” facilities to hold deserters don’t exist, he continues; and as a result, they exist outside of any legal norms with all the horrors that such a placement opens the way to. Those in term are given the choice of returning to the frontlines or remaining in these camps indefinitely.
Death Spiral of Russia’s Coal Industry Brought Forward a Decade by Kremlin Miscalculations and Putin’s War in Ukraine, Economist Says
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 24 – The role that strikes by coal miners played in the collapse of the Soviet Union is one of the most important but largely unrecognized factors in the collapse of that country (newleftreview.org/issues/i181/articles/theodore-friedgut-lewis-siegelbaum-perestroika-from-below-the-soviet-miners-strike-and-its-aftermath.pdf ).
Consequently, the fate of Russian coal mines has long played a much larger part of the thinking of post-Soviet Russian leaders than many in the West are inclined to think. But now a Russian economist is warning that the death spiral of that industry is not only close but has been brought forward by perhaps a decade by Kremlin miscalculations and Putin’s war in Ukraine.
Tatyana Lanushina, an independent expert on energy issues, draws that conclusion on the basis of a close analysis of what has been happening to Russia’s coal industry over the last several decades and what has taken place in particular during the last three years (theins.ru/ekonomika/280751).
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She says that more than half of all Russian coal companies were unprofitable last year, the result of Moscow’s failure to recognize changes in the world’s energy industry, a failure exacerbated by the Kremlin’s push to get funds from existing sources to finance its war in Ukraine.
Had the Kremlin begun to shift away from goal to renewable energy, she suggests, it would be in a far better position, an argument others have made as well (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2025/02/a-well-executed-closure-of-russias.html). But because it failed to do that, the branch faces collapse and massive strikes are possible.
Such strikes, her analysis suggests, could shake the government and the country in ways equally profound to those which helped to undermine the Soviet government and led to the disintegration of the USSR in 1991.
Saturday, April 26, 2025
Russia has Its Own Form of Gerrymandering with Moscow Redrawing Electoral Districts to Weaken Urban Voters Inclined to Support Opposition, ‘Horizontal Russia’ Says
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 23 – Moscow has now drawn new electoral districts for the 2026 Duma vote, a process that is required by law to take place every ten years to ensure that these districts remain roughly equal in size. But in fact, experts with whom Horizontal Russia spoke say, the lines have been drawn to weaken urban voters who are less likely to support the party of power.
Each electoral district has approximately 500,000 residents, but there are a variety of ways that officials can draw the lines to achieve that. One step they have taken this time more than in the past is to combine portions of urban centers with larger rural ones to boost the chances United Russia will win (semnasem.org/articles/2025/04/23/rossijskaya-vlast-25-let-ubivala-izbiratelnyj-process-pochemu-ona-vse-eshe-boitsya-vyborov).
This has happened, Russian political scientist Dmitry Loboyko says, because the Kremlin knows that rural voters are reliably in the corner of the party of power while urban ones are more likely to vote for opposition parties and reduce the chances that the elections will turn out as the Putin regime wants.
To be sure, Loboyko and other experts say, this redrawing of electoral district boundaries is only one of the many ways the Kremlin manipulates elections and ensures that its candidates win. Using spoilers and outright falsification are likely more important. But Russian gerrymandering matters and should be factored into any analysis of what is going on.
Russia Least Religious in Practice among Predominantly Orthodox Christian Countries Despite Relatively High Levels of Declared Orthodox Identity, Surveys Show
Paul Goble
Staunton, Apr. 23 – In terms of practice and respect for the church, Russia is the least religious among all predominantly Orthodox Christian countries, the World Values Survey finds, despite Kremlin efforts it as the leader of the Orthodox world. Instead, its people treat Orthodox as a norm to be acknowledged but not necessarily follow, just as they did Soviet values earlier.
That conclusion – see worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSDocumentationWV7.jsp as discussed at re-russia.net/analytics/0283/ -- is supported by Russian polling which shows young Russians far more irreligious and even hostile to the ROC MP than their elders, people born in Soviet times and who view Orthodoxy like they viewed Soviet ideological positions.
Compared to other predominantly Orthodox countries, these surveys show that far more Russians are atheist, far fewer attend church or church rules, see religiosity as important for themselves or as a quality they seek in their children. In short, Putin has made Russia a country of “declarative” Orthodox but not a religious one.