Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 9 – Academician Valery
Tishkov, the director of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, says that
he has been pushing for the Russian census to include the category “mixed
nationality” as the enumerations of many other countries do so that children of
mixed marriages or those uncertain of their ethnicity do not have to choose one
or the other.
In an interview
toNazAccent.ru on the sidelines of the Tenth Congress of Ethnographer and
Anthropologists in Moscow, Tishkov said that there had been plans to bring the
Russian Federation into line with world practice in the 2010 census but that
this had been blocked by “bureaucratic delays” (nazaccent.ru/content/8335-akademik-o-mezhnacionalnyh-otnosheniyah-ne-cheshite.html).
The
ethnographer added that he “thinks that we will do this by the next census,” which
will probably take place in 2020, and that this will ease the selection above
all of children of mixed marriages who find it difficult to choose a single
nationality” when their parents represent two different ones.”
But as Tishkov
makes clear, his concerns about mixed identities involve far more people. “Of course,” he says, people are influenced by
“were they are born, grow up and live and by the socialization which they passed
through in their youth and adulthood. But for the majority what is primary is
the milieu in which we live, the [civic] Russian based on the Russian language and
on all-Russian culture.”
“In a big city where so much is
mixed together, strong regional or local identities may emerge,” the
ethnographer continues. Sventy-three percent of the population of the Russian
Federation now lives in cities. That means that ethnic problems more often
emerge and “have a tendency” to become widespread.
But as Tishkov has often insisted in the
past, this situation also means something else: it means that ethnicity is not “the
primary” identity for many of these urban residents who instead define themselves
in other ways. Consequently, “a categorical ‘either-or’ choice is incorrect”
and must not be required.
Instead, he say, “the contemporary
individual has a complicated identity: he can be both an [ethnic] Russian and a
[civic] one at the same time.”
Tishkov couches his argument on this
point by saying that “one must not dramatize” the situation or “say that Russia
is dying,” that it is “filling up with migrants, that “Wahhabism is spreading
everywhere except Chukotka.” Instead, Russia’s
“multi-national quality is … a given,” and “the more calmly we look at things,
the better.”
The Russian academician is certainly
correct in terms of international practice and the realities of Russian urban
life, but his push for the mixed nationality category and even more his
suggestion, accurate on its face, that an ethnic Russian can be a civic
non-ethnic one at the same time is certain to provoke anger among Russian
nationalist groups.
As has been the case in the past,
these groups view Tishkov who has long been a close advisor on ethnic issues to
the Russian government as a Trojan horse interested in the destruction of
ethnic Russian national identity. Consequently, his comments now about a mixed
nationality category for the next census may make that less likely rather than
more.
But more immediately, Tishkov’s
arguments seems likely to spark a new wave of demands among Russian nationalists
that Moscow stop getting its advice on ethnic issues from him, demands that in
the currently ethnically overheated environment in the Russian Federation the
Kremlin may find hard to reject out of hand.
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