Paul Goble
Staunton, March 18 – The use of the
term “Rossiyane” for all the citizens of the Russian Federation will strengthen
the Russian nation while paradoxically, historian and liberal nationalist
Aleksandr Goryanin argues, the promotion of the slogan “Russia for the
Russians” will harm the nation and quite possibly destroy the country.
In an interview with Aleksey
Polubota of “Svobodnaya pressa” that was posted online on Friday, Goryanin, who
has sometimes described himself as “a paradoxical nationalist,” advances this
and other arguments in support of his controversial contention that being a
“liberal doesn’t mean [being] a Russophobe” as many Russian nationalists think
(svpressa.ru/society/article/65509/).
Faced
with an influx of migrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus, many Russians
are attracted to the slogan “Russia for the Russians,” Goryanin says, but most
of them do not mean that the country should be “exclusively for the [ethnic]
Russians” but rather that Russians should have greater control over their own situation.
Obviously,
he continues, this slogan “is capable of assembling not a few supporters
including completely well-intentioned people, but it will not give rise to ‘an
all-people movement,” at least of the kind some hope because “the overwhelming
majority hear in these words a call for ethnic blood purges and mass expulsions”
of a kind they do not want.
What
people should be saying, he suggests, is “Rossiya for the Rossiyane,” that is,
Russia for its citizens. But unfortunately, many Russians don’t like the term “Rossiya”
or even more the term “Rossiyane.” They
need to understand that the country has been called “Rossiya” for a long time
and that “’Rossiyane’ is an old word,” dating at least to the mid-17th
century.
Ultimately if
slowly, “the word ‘Rossiyane’ cannot fail to win because it unites all our
citizens, Russians, Tatars, Komis, Kalmyks, Chechens, Chuvash, Sakha, Osetins,
Karels, and so on, just as the word ‘Briton’ unites the English, the Scots, the
Welsh,” and other groups in the British Isles.
The only thing needed for people to become accustomed to that is time.
Many people who advance the slogan “Russia
for the [Ethnic] Russians” want to restore the notorious fifth or nationality
line in the passports, but they do not ask themselves “how this will help in
the struggle with illegal migration?”
Such a move would do nothing in that regard, and that means no one
should be taking it seriously.
“The new Russia,” Goryanin says, “did
not inherit one of the main causes” for the end of the USSR: “a lack of a
common name for residents” of the entire country that everyone could use in
daily speech. “That may seem something
petty, but it isn’t.” And that is why it
is so important that “Rossiyane” triumph.
To promote that end, the historian
continues, Russians need to understand that “the formation of [a non-ethnic]
Russian civil nation will boost the Russian ethnos, while the slogan ‘Russian
for the Russians’ will reduce it.”
Those who say that the Russian
government is intentionally working to diminish the status of Russians need to
recognize that they are in error. “The authorities have made a number of
mistakes” but those mistakes, almost all of which affect migration issues, can
be corrected once the reasons behind them are understood.
The race for profits and
consequently for cheap labor, for example, has led many of those in or near the
powers that be to press for immigration, failing to recognize that their own
approach is self-defeating. They may make money in the short term, but they
will fail to innovate and succeed over the longer haul.
And those who fear that the Russian
nation is about to disappear into a black hole need to recognize that the situation
in that regard is getting better and that figures about crime, alcohol
consumption, imprisonment, and abortions are all better at least relative to
other countries than these measures were at the end of the Soviet period. That
gives some ground for hope.
Even those who understand these
things often fall back on slogans like Dostoyevsky’s insistence that to be a
Russian is to be Orthodox. That might have been true when the great writer said
it but it isn’t today. The world has
changed, and Russia has changed as well, something that is less a matter for
regret than many imagine.
And there is another fear that
Russians today have that needs to be addressed, Goryanin continues. Many feel
that Russians attracted and absorbed others in the past but now is pushing them
away. There is some truth in that, but
it is certainly not a black and white situation either in the past or now.
“The flood of foreign gastarbeiters
and even more of illegal migrants must be stopped,” the historian argues, “but
[Russian] citizens have the right to settle anywhere in the country,” a
distinction that some Russian nationalists don’t make but one that can help
unite rather than divide the Russian Federation.
Asked by his interviewer on the
justice of the widespread assumption that “’liberal’ is a synonym for the word ‘Russophobe,’”
Goryanin said that it is entirely possible to be a liberal and a nationalist
and that he and those he worked with at the now-defunct GlobalRus.ru website
provide clear examples of that.
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