Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 10 – The Soviet
government continued to promote the non-Russian nationalities at the expense of
the Russians long after the former had achieved equality, a strategy that led
to the degradation of the Russian nation and ultimately to the disintegration
of the USSR, according to an article written in the 1980s but rejected for
publication at that time.
That article by Galina Litvinova,
was turned down by the editors of “Nash Sovremennik” more than 25 years ago,
but it was posted online this week by “Voyennoye obozreniye” apparently as an
implicit warning to the current Russian government about the consequences of its
nationality policy (topwar.ru/26487-k-voprosu-o-nacionalnoy-politike.html).
That intention is suggested not only
by the increasing appearance of discussions of nationality policy in Soviet
times but by an introduction to Litvinova’s article offered by “Voyennoye
obozreniye” whose editors say that Moscow’s policies after World War II hurt
the Russian nation more than earlier ones and that they led to the end of “a
great state.”
Most people think that “the Russian
people were subjected to a genocide only during the Civil War,
collectivization, repessions, and the artificially organied famine,” but in
fact, the editors note, the most dramatic decline in the size of the Russian
nation and state occurred “in the post-war period.”
With the help of “political-economic
mechanisms,” the state “sucked out the life of the [ethnic] Russian people, “Voyennoye
obozreniye” says, a reflection of “the anti-Russian direction of that administrative
mechanism which was created I 1917” and which is documented by Litvinova in her
hitherto unpublished article.
According to Litvinova, Soviet
policy sought to equalize the status of all the peoples of the Soviet Union, a
goald it had “essentially” achieved by the end of the 1930s. But instead of
stopping, the communist leadership continued that policy, thereby creating “a
new form of inequality: the earlier backward peoples began to surpass those who
had helped them.”
The Russian nationalist writer
deploys census and other data to make her point that the communist regime
helped the non-Russians while hurting the Russians, whose birthrates fell,
representation in science and government declined, and whose sense of purpose
was sapped and ultimately destroyed.
Specifically, she writes, “in all
the union republics, including the RSFSR, the share of the indigenous nation
among students, graduate students, scientific and leading workers, and higher
organs of power was greater than in the population as a whole, while at the same
time, it was as arule lower within the industrial working class.”
The Soviet government thus
sacrificed the “elder brother,” the ethnic Russian people, on the altar of the
promotion of “the increase of the social-economic development of earlier
backward peoples,” shifting investment and production away from Russian areas
to non-Russian ones and invariably favoring the latter over the former in a
variety of ways.
Most of Litvinova’s figures about
the complaints of ethnic Russians at the end of Soviet times are familiar to
the expert community, but some of them are especially noteworthy less because
of what they say about Russian conditions and demands at that time than about what
they suggest at least some Russians are thinking now.
She notes that the demographic decline
of the ethnic Russians between 1945 and 1985 was partically covered by the fact
that children of ethnically mixed marriages, such as between Russians and
Tatars and Russians and Jews, in “98 percent” of the cases “declared themselves
to be Russians.” Were that to change, Russian decline would have been more
obvious. Now, of course, it has.
Moreover, Litvinova says, fertility
rates among Russians fell below replacement levels and life expectancy at birth
among rural Russians fell to between 54 and 57 years at the end of Soviet
times. And this in turn meant that rural schools were small, had few teachers,
and thus had worse instruction than others, a problem that Russians complain
about now.
The Soviet government’s “insufficient
attention to the fate of the [ethnic] Russian people” put the Russians at a
disadvantage with other nations, Litvinova says. And she suggests that Moscow needed recognize
the reality that at that time, Tyumen and Gorky oblasts were economically as
significant as Kyrgyzstan and Estonia.
That should have led the Soviet
leaders to recognize “the necessity of a seirous reform of the administration
of the territory” of the USSR. The one
that existed in the 1980s may have been “good 50 years earlier, but it was then
“breaking the development of the material and spiritual forces of society.” True equality of nations and territories needs
to be restored.
Moscow, Litvinova concludes, “must
strictly follow the constitutional principle of the equality of nations, of
their equality not only in law but in the opportunities for the realization of
these rights by representatives of any nation, including the Russian, in all
spheres of the material and spiritual life of society.”
Although the non-Russians then and
now would challenge both Litvinova’s figures and arguments, clearly it is the
case that many Russians then and now accept both, a pattern that suggests they
may now act in ways that parallel those they followed a generation ago and that
could point to an outcome for the Russian Federation similar to that of the
USSR.
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