Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 26 –President
Vladimir Putin’s call for a single Russian history textbook will inevitably
mean that children will hear different versions of the past from the schools
than they will hear from their parents, a problem familiar to those who lived
under Soviet power but one that few in the Russian Federation have had to worry
about.
In a commentary in “Novy sad,”
Vladimir Berkhin, who earlier taught history but now heads the Orthodox
Predaniye Foundation, raises for the first time in many years the old
Soviet-era question: “What is to be done, if parents and the school teach
something different” (nsad.ru/articles/edinyj-uchebnik-istorii-chto-delat-esli-roditeli-i-shkola-uchat-raznomu).
Berkhin says that he does not see “anything
terrible” in the Kremlin’s plans to introduce a single textbook with a single
point of view. Indeed, he says, this is “a manifestation of good sense” on the
part of the government because “in order to govern people, one needs to
understand what they think about their own past and their own history.”
“The state, honestly concerned about
how it will administer the population tomorrow, inevitably wants to form in
this population a completely definite model of the past in which namely this
state is legitimate, namely this state is more just, and therefore logically it
exists at the present moment,” Berkhin says.
At the same time, however, he notes that
some parents “are justly concerned that in this single textbook there will be
written something which does not correspond to the ideas about history which
are accepted in their own family.” That
is a problem, but it is one that is “normal and inevitable when treatments [of
the past] diverge.”
What they need to remember is that “a school textbook is not a scientific work and that no one ever has put as his goal the creation of an ideologically neutral school textbook.” That is not its task, Berkhin says. Scholars may try to write their works in that way, but that is because they are operating according to different principles.
What they need to remember is that “a school textbook is not a scientific work and that no one ever has put as his goal the creation of an ideologically neutral school textbook.” That is not its task, Berkhin says. Scholars may try to write their works in that way, but that is because they are operating according to different principles.
“For an historian, the Battle of Kursk
is night the struggle of Good with Evil or of Evil with Evil but simply a
military confrontation that took place at a specific time under specific
conditions and which led to one consequence or another.” And to do that, a writer must seek
objectivity, although this is never completely possible.
School textbooks have a different
purpose, Berkhin repeats, and parents must recognize that even as they insist on
their rights “as adults” to raise their children “with definite ideas” that may
be different than those their children are being presented by the schools. All
that they should insist upon is that the school texts are honest and admit how
ideological they are. That can be achieved by the inclusion in the introduction
to such books of an open declaration of that fact.
Such a declaration might look like the
following: “this text proceeds from the most important principle for
contemporary Russia of the continuity between the Russian Empire, Soviet Russia
and the Russian Federation as stages of a single process of the establishment
of Russia as a civilization form.”
Or it might feature the words: “The
authors start from the proposition that the events of the beginning of the 20th
century in Russia represented a tragedy which violated the natural course of
Russian history and led the country and people into a social, national and
philosophical dead end, the escape from which is possible only by a return to
the common path of developed (western) countries.”
Berkhin suggests that “ideology can be
useful or harmful for the resolution of one or another task. It can be logical
or insane.” And he says he does not oppose having ideology form the basis of
school textbooks. He asks only the authors of such school texts openly declare
their ideological purposes and not seek to present their work as scholarship.
But even if that does not happen, he
suggests, Russian parents shouldn’t work – and won’t if they recall the Soviet
past. Then, the ideological pressure of
the state was “immeasurably more powerful” including in the area of religious belief. But the atheistic policies of the CPSU “did
not prevent believing parents from raising their children in the church.”
The children quickly learned to let “all
this ideological noise” pass in one ear and out the other. But at the same time, this had a serious
consequence for the state itself: “The population gradually ceased to list to
the ritual words of the most advanced part of humanity. And how that ended is
well known.” That history in short could easily repeat itself.
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