Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 4 – Lenin famously
observed a century ago that with an organization of revolutionaries, he could
overturn Russia. Now, Rashit Akhmetov,
editor of Kazan’s “Zvezda Povolzhya” argues, the Tatars of the Middle Volga
must form an organization capable of transforming themselves and their
relationship with the Russian Federation.
In what some will view as an act of
despair and others as an indication of overweening optimism, Akhmetov argues
that in this century, “the Tatars have only one civilized path of development
and of movement toward the construction of a genuine, free, independent and
democratic state, the political self-organization of the people.”
“No one will give the Tatars
liberation,” the editor suggests; the Tatars can achieve that only by their own
actions. And they will be judged by future generations on the basis of what the
Tatars do in the current situation, one that he suggests represents a clear
test of “their political maturity” (zvezdapovolzhya.ru/obshestvo/my-mozhem-28-05-2013.html).
To date, the Tatars have achieve a great
deal – a 70 billion US dollar GDP, victories in various competitions, and the
sense that they can achieve even more, Akhmetov says. And the current
preparations for the Universiade represent yet another “strengthening of the
image of the republic as an advanced region of the Russian Federation.”
But the Tatars and their republic have
not achieved the most important thing, the editor continues. In Soviet times,
they were not able to achieve “even the status of a union republic of the USSR,”
and now, “the Stalinist theory of autonomization is again dominating the
situation in Russia.”
“The striving of a people for political
independence is an objective course of history, a natural historical process,
and attempts to block it, especially by means of repression, force, or insane
provocations, such as the proposal to liquidate the Republic Tatarstan, can
lead to the strongest deformations in the development of this process and are extremely
dangerous.”
Proposals to “liquidate” republics are “’terrorist’
in their essence and recall “the equally absurd slogan of liquidating Russia itself
as a national formation and transferring it under the protection of China.” While some have forgotten, that is exactly
what Mao Zedong proposed in 1949 when he called for unity the USSR and China “into
a single state.”
“From the point of view of Marxism,” the
Kazan editor notes, “this was the principled way to proceed. But had Stalin
agreed, “today there would not be any Russians left in the USSR.” By rejecting
Mao’s ideas, Stalin “preserved the Russian nation,” even though to do so he had
to violate Marxist logic.
Contemporary Europe reflects the
national revolutions which were part and parcel of the bourgeois-democratic
revolutions. Akhmetov says. If Russia chooses “the path of civilized
capitalism, then it is necessary to prepare oneself for the process of the
inevitable onset of the era of national revolutions in Russia.”
That course requires that the peoples of
the country workout “a mutually profitable form of existence which starts from
an appreciation of the political realities of the 21st century,” and
if that happens, the editor says, if there is “a bourgeois-democratic national
revolution in Tatarstan, Russians too will live much more comfortably there
than they do today.”
Any such revolution must take place “first
in the spirit, in the area of ideology,” Akhmetov continues. “Therefore, the
Tatars must formulate the principles of the Tatar path forward,” and in doing
so overcome their fear of taking “the first step toward an ‘adult’ Tatar
future.”
Toward that end, the Tatars need “an
all-Russian Confederal Party which will permit the consideration of the
interests of the development of other peoples, for they will be able to liberate
themselves” only by the combined efforts of the various peoples of the current
Russian Federation, something that will require the “radical spiritual
liberation” of the Russians from their imperial consciousness.
Recent Tatar victories in a variety
of areas show that that nation is undergoing “a renaissance” which reflects “the
growth of its passionate qualities.” No
nation with such a passionate basis “can be a dependent one.” Such a spirit
requires independence, as every “national revolution” always has.
Opposing this trend is both “senseless
and dangerous,” Akhmetov says, because “if an individual recognizes himself as
a free man, then no one can ever make him a slave.” And he concludes his argument on behalf of a vastly more
independent Tatarstan with yet another reference to Marxism.
Marx thought, Akhmedov points out,
that economics rather than passionate energy defines the course of history. But
he was wrong because such energy is part of culture and culture moves things
forward. For Tatars and many others, “religion gives a most powerful passionate
impulse to the people.”
Consequently, for the Tatars of the
Middle Volga, it is critically important to develop “Tatar theology” as it is
that which is “at the foundation of the development of science and economics.”
True, Akhmetov concludes, “with [the Tatars today] it is history which
currently plays the role of theology.”
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