Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 5 – Circassian groups
in Karachayevo-Cherkessia, Krasnodar kray, and Aygeya have called on Russian
President Vladimir Putin to recognize the actions of the Russian Imperial
government against their ancestors in 1864 as a genocide, to assist the
repatriation of Circassians from war-torn Syria, and to include Circassian
themes at the Sochi Olympics.
Their 2700-word appeal, the text of
which is available at aheku.org/page-id-3542.html and
is discussed at kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/223679/,
is likely
to fall on deaf ears in Moscow, but it does mark another step in the
development of the Circassian movement in the Caucasus and in the growing ties
between it and the far larger and more radical Circassian community abroad.
“Recognition by the current Russian
state and society of the Circassian (Adygey) genocide,” the appeal begins, “will
be viewed by Adygs above all as the triumph of historic justice and also as a
fundamental all-human moral act on the basis of which will be possible an
all-embracing rehabilitation of the people now spread across the world.”
The deportation of 90 percent of the
Circassian population in 1864 aftera 101-year war between its members and the
Russian state, which left only 50,000 Circassians in their historic homeland
was “one of the forms” of the genocide conducted against them given that it
destroyed almost all of their communal institutions, the appeal says.
The authors of the appeal argue
that President Putin can build on ideas advanced by President Boris Yeltsin in
the 1990s when the latter noted that “the problems which have been left to us
as an inheritance from the Caucasus war and in particular the return of the
descendents of Caucasians to their historic motherland msut be resolved at the
international level.”
At that time, Yeltsin expressed his
certainty that only by facing up to the past could Russia hope to overcome it
and ensure the integration of all its peoples.
Unfortunately, the appeal says, the Russian government has not continued
in that direction but rather moved in another, one that is alienating many who
would otherwise be its friends.
Given Putin’s comments about the Russian
past, it is highly unlikely that the current Kremlin leader would ever consider
making such a declaration about the genocide of the Circassians.
The appeal also calls on Moscow to
assist in the repatriation of Circassians from Syria where they find themselves
in the midst of a horrific civil war. The appeal’s authors say that the
Circassian republics are ready and able to resettle many of these people if
only Moscow will allow them to enter the Russian Federation.
But on this point too, the Russian
government seems unlikely to respond positively. The Russian embassy in Damascus has dismissed
suggestions that the Circassians of Syria are the targets of discrimination or
oppression by either the Asad government or the Syrian opposition (nazaccent.ru/content/7686-putina-poprosili-priznat-genocid-cherkesov.html).
Finally,
with regard to the upcoming Olympics in Sochi, the appeal notes that the games
themselves have introduced “a new and extremely politicized impulse in public
discussions” about the Circassian genocide.
That is unfortunate, it continues, because the Olympics should remain
outside of politics of that kind.
But
at the same time, the authors of the appeal say, the Olympic Charter and the
tradition of international Olympic competition requires “a demonstration to the
world community of the unique historical and cultural heritage” of the autochthonian
peoples on the site of any such competitions.
Countries who organize Olympiads, it
ponts out, “traditionally display maximum efforts in order in the course of
presenting themselves to the world to demonstrate their own tolerance and willingness
to show concern for this or that indigenous people” in the cultural programs
that surround such competitions.
“This experience,” the authors of
the appeal argue, should be taken into consideration by the Russian authorities
as they prepare for the Sochi games. At the very least, they should know that
this is “the expectation” of the Circassian community not only in the Russian
Federation where it numbers 500,000 but abroad where it counts more than five
million members.
Again, Putin is unlikely to respond
positively, although because this Circassian appeal unlike many others coming
from abroad does not call for a boycott of the games, there would appear to be
some room for a Russian response that would at least acknowledge the horrific
past that the Circassian nation has experienced.
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