Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 27 – Emil Pain,
perhaps Russia’s leading specialist on inter-ethnic relations, says that only
the transformation of ethnic Russian nationalism can save Russia, a country
whose extraordinarily high levels of xenophobia make the modernization of the
country impossible.
This is only one of the many noteworthy
conclusions, Pain, the director of the Center of Ethno-Political and Regional
Research,makes in the course of a 5200-word interview with the new “Russkaya
planeta” portal about the ethnic challenges facing the Russian Federation now
and in the near future (rusplt.ru/policy/pain_interview.html).
**Not
only are the peoples of the Russian Federation going through a process of “retraditionalizaiton,”
but so too is the Russian government as shown by its passion for adopting programs
like a nationality strategy document “in the spirit of the Soviet system.”
**Russia
is “radically dissimilar to the greater part of nation states because it is
part of a quite rare group of countries which bear the name of one of its component
groups” but includes places which at one time were independent states or are
radically dissimilar in other ways.
**Russia
is “a continental empire”and as such cannot govern its colonies one way and its
metropole another. “The regime is unified and indivisible,” and as such, “it is
far more difficult to free itself from its internal colonies and become a
nation state.”
**“For
the majority of countries, current inter-cultural problems are the problems of
an arriving population and the local one. In Russia, in contrast, the main problem
is not migrants that have arrived but the local population.” There is no legal difference
between the resideents ofMakachkala and Petersburg, but “arrivals fromt eh
republics of the North Caucasus are called migrants, but those coming from
Tatarstan, not to speak of Petersburg are not.”
**Russian “hatred toward representatives of the
North Caucasus is four times greater than towards representatives of Central
Asia who are the largest group of immigrants. We do not have problems with
foreign non-citizzens but rather with those from within the country.” That makes
Russia more similar to empires than to nation states.
**As the end of the Soviet Union showed, such an
arrangement is not sustainable forever. But with regard to the future of the
Russian Federation, Hegel’s observation as repeated by Marx is “just.” That is,
history will repeat itself; the first time as tragedy, the second as “farce.”
That is because, “an attempt to apply an old arrangement in new
circumstanes is almost always comic.”
**“The
less legitimate the formal head is, the more power informal leaders have. In such regions, the real choice is not
between assigned and appointed [governors] but between legal and illegal rules.”
In Russia today, such people are not really representatives of the center, “they
only appear to be.”
**Ethnic
Russians began leaving the North Caucasus in the 1970s; their outflow only
intensified in the 1990s. The beginning 40 years ago reflected “the Soviet
nationality policy of korenizatsiya,” the replacement of outsiders, often
Russians, in positions of responsibility with representatives of the titular
nationality.
**In
the 1990s, ethnic mobilization dominated the situation in the North Caucasus. In
the first decade of this century, religious mobilization became the more
important. “But in 2011-2012, something curious happened.” There was an increase
in both, and the conflict between Russians and non-Russians became ever sharper
as a result, leading to the restarting of territorial conflicts as well.
**The
Caucasus Emirate is “serious” because it is “thee only international organization”
in the region which includes “representatives of practically all ethnic groups”
of the North Caucasus. It would become more influential and more radical if
this region were independent.
**There
is thus “no other path” forward “besides genuine federalization” and the
modernization it would bring.
**The
societies of the Caucasus are more prepared for democracy than are the Russians
because the former have so much experience with elected leaders of various
kinds.
**“Russian
nationalism must be transformed into civic nationalism [because] thisis the
only path of the salvation of the country and the resolution of a multitude of
problems.” But that will be difficult because “Russia has one of the highest
levels of xenophobia among the countries of the world,” and that makes
modernization “even of the indigenous territories, impossible.”
**At the same
time, Russia has “extremely low levels” of patriotism and “identification with the
country and its territory.” Russians identify instead either with a local area “or
with the entire world.” The country itself is not the focus of their
identities. Instead, Russians “have a high level of cosmopolitanism.”
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