Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 28 – Unlike ethnic
minorities in the Russian Federation, ethnic Russians are currently incapable
of organizing themselves into a unified force to defend their interests, the
result less of the current policies of the Russian state than of social and
economic change over the past century, according to a leading Academy of
Sciences sociologist.
This weakness is reflected in their inability
to form their own political party, Leonty Byzov of the Moscow Institute of
Sociology says, as well as in the rise of regional identities within the
Russian ethnos and the failure of Russians to organize collectively even in
non-Russian areas where they might be expected to behave as other minorities do.
In an interview with Aleksey
Polubota of “Svobodnaya pressa,” Byzov argues that the Russian government is
the only factor responsible for this situation. Instead, he says, “the process
of the degradation of [ethnic] Russians has been taking place over decades and
its roots are to be found in Soviet times” (svpressa.ru/society/article/64551/).
But
he suggests that this process is currently accelerating and that the
authorities “really do not understand how to solve this problem” and may “no
even sense it.” That is because “they
think only about the present day or in the best sense about tomorrow.” But they
“do not think about what will be the case after a decade or two.”
This
shortsightedness is not limited to the Russian government, Byzov continues. It
is also a feature of the Russian people. And that means that “it is difficult
to say to what extent the process of the degradation of the Russian ethnos is
reversible” or whether it has gone too far for the Russian nation to recover as
a nation.
Besides
the numerical decline in the number of ethnic Russians and the depopulation of
historically Russian regions, Byzov says, there has been “a general loss of
passion, an atomization of society, and the loss of a creative basis which were
characteristic of the Russians over the course of many centuries.”
The
reasons for this disturbing trend are to be sought in the consequences of
forced collectivization and rapid urbanization, in which the traditional
Russian way of life was destroyed and nothing collective was put in its place.
Indeed, Byzov argues, “it is possible to say that [ethnic] Russians as a nation
do not currently exist.”
There
is little or no chance to reverse this, he says. On the one hand, “the return
to the Russian tradition is hardly possible. And on the other, “life in the
conditions of a contemporary city, the impact of mass culture, and the
deepening psychology of a consumer society all are leading to an intensification
of the processes put in play in the 20th century.”
Byzov
says that the argument that the failure of the Russians to organize reflects
their majority status, but he says that argument falls apart if one considers
the fact than even when ethnic Russians find themselves in the status of
minorities in some non-Russian republics in the Russian Federation, “they do
not overcome their divisions” and unite for their interests.
Instead,
even where social science suggests they should organize, they remain “quite
passive.” That is not the result of
state policy but rather “the extremely low capacity of contemporary Russians
for self-organization.” Clearly, “if there is no sense of commonality, then no
national cultural autonomy will help.”
None
of the various proposals for a definition of Russian ethnic identity has found
wide acceptance, Byzov continues. There is no possibility of returning to
traditional culture, and Russian Orthodoxy is seen by “the majority of Russians”
as “a formal identity: when they call themselves Orthodox, people in part do
not know what this means.”
Today,
there is no “clear definition of who is a Russian” either among specialists or
among ethnic Russians themselves. Instead, “identity among Russians to an ever
greater extent is connected with regions or place of residence.” Siberians, for
example, are “more inclined to identify themselves regionally than nationally.”
Many
believe that ethnic Russians will unite because of the increasing number of
immigrants, but this appears unlikely, Byzov says. Rather, he suggests, “[ethnic] Russians are
beginning to retreat and representatives of diasporas and ethnic communities
advance even when they are given formally equal opportunities.”
That
process, which is most in evidence in major cities in central Russia, bothers
Russians, but “no one knows” how to reverse it. One reason it has gone so far
is that in the 1990s, “spheres in which Russians were traditionally stronger – science,
education, and defense – degraded,” and ever more Russians found themselves competing
with non-Russians in small business where “Russians do not have special
abilities and traditionally lose” to other groups.
Another
reason for the degradation of Russians lies in the corruption of the state and
society in Russia, but here too, Russians do not appear to understand how it
affects them. “Systemic corruption is
now a form of existence for society,” reflecting the rise of “informal ties and
agreements.” Non-Russians find it easier to navigate that than do ethnic
Russians.
Indeed,
Byzov says, “it is perfectly obvious
that a situation of total corruption is more profitable to them than to the
[ethnic] Russian indigenous majority.” But changing that situation will require
more than a crackdown on corruption; it will require both a change in the norms
of society and the values in the Russian community.
Unfortunately,
Byzov says, the possibilities for that are currently limited. Under Putin, he
suggests, “a bureaucracy has arisen which today in essence has privatized the
state,” works for its interests rather than those of the society. But the only way to change that is to
increase political action by the population, something that has not happened.
Russians
remain divided even ideologically. On the one hand, there is “the traditional
form of Russian nationalism, national-patriotism.” But it is confined largely to representatives
of the older generation and “today it has lost its monopoly.” On the other, there are now some national
democrats who want to carve out of the empire a distinctly ethnic Russian
state, a trend that “is still not very popular.”
Obviously,
“nationalist attitudes” are increasing in the Russian Federation and even among
ethnic Russians, Byzov acknowledges. But he points out the gap between the 50
or 60 percent of ethnic Russians who have nationalist attitudes and the four to
five percent who are prepared to vote for groups that articulate them.
Until
that changes – and until ethnic Russians find a new basis for unity among
themselves – no strong nationalist political party is likely to form, Byzov
concludes, the current situation of ethnic degradation of the Russian nation is
likely to continue and, the sociologist implies, may even get worse.
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