Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 19 – Three developments
this week – a requirement that applicants to a medical school list their
nationality, cuts in the number of slots at institutions training future
teachers of non-Russian languages, and the collapse of plans for a single
country-wide Russian history text – point to some major shifts in Russian life
in the months and years ahead.
First, just days before the Russian
Duma passed a law banning employers from asking the nationality of potential
employees, the Pirogov National Medical Research University required those
seeking to enroll to declare their nationality (peoples-rights.info/postupayushhim-v-meduniversitet-im-pirogova-pridetsya-ukazat-svoyu-nacionalnost/).
Given the notorious history of “line
five” in Soviet passports, media reports about that requirement sparked sharp
criticism from a member of the Russian Social Chamber, but in what may matter
more given the direction Moscow seems to be moving, a defense of the practice
by Sergey Markov, a member of the Presidential Council for Civil Society.
Oleg Zykov, a member of the
commission on nationality relations of the Social Chamber, said that “national
membership has no influence on the ability to treat or save other people.
Therefore the appearance [of this requirement in the application] can testify
only to the moral outlook of those people who composed this document.”
He added that the introduction of
this requirement suggests that those people “have decided to organize some sort
of segregation along ethnic lines.”
But Markov defended the practice
saying that “in this incident there is no violation of the law” and that
because of growing ethnic tensions in the Russian Federation, collecting such
information can help stave off “possible conflicts between future” students. “One
must not say that asking about nationality is absolutely impermissible.”
Second, there are many ways to kill
minority languages, but perhaps the most effective way to strangle them without
attracting much criticism is to gradually cut back on the number of people who
are qualified to teach them and then say that unfortunately nothing can be done
about the situation. That is precisely
what the Russian authorities appear to be doing.
Earlier this week, Rimma Popova,
head of the chair of Komi and Finno-Ugric philology at St. Petersburg State
University, said that the university has cut back on the number of slots for
people who want to teach Komi, forcing schools “to get by on their own
resources,” something they soon will not be able to do (finnougr.ru/news/index.php?ELEMENT_ID=10743).
The
situation is becoming critical, she pointed out. “Now there are few graduates of non-Russian
schools.” From among them, there are few who want to become teachers of those
languages. And now the universities and pedagogical institutions are reducing
the opportunities for those who want to pursue that career.
This could lead to the demise of the
non-Russian schools and the subsequent death of the languages these schools
help to preserve. Given the seriousness
of that problem, Popova argued, “the problem must find its solution at the highest
levels” before it is too late.
And third, despite President
Vladimir Putin’s commitment to a single Russian history textbook, Moscow has
now shown itself willing to negotiate about the subject, raising the
possibility that many of the non-Russian republics will be able to insist on
their own nationally-specific textbooks and thus reducing the chance that the
schools will help produce Russian unity.
This week, Duma Speaker Sergey
Naryshkin went to Kazan to speak with officials there about a compromise
arrangement with Tatar scholars and officials. His trip came after Rafael
Khakimov declared that Moscow’s view of history “does not correspond with the
view from Kazan” (rus-obr.ru/days/25489).
According to Natalya Zubarevich, the
director of regional programs of Moscow’s Independent Institute for Social
Policy, Moscow will “find a special format” for a Tatar textbook “because
[central officials] always do,” fearful that not doing so will exacerbate
tensions between Tatarstan and the Russian Federation.
Thus, “it is probable,” according to
Russian nationalist Rus-obr.ru portal, “that there will appear several
histories: a Kazan one about the great and wonderful Golden Horde and the
cruelties of the Russian occupiers and a Muscovite variant about the great
Eurasian friendship of the peoples who have come together in a multi-national
ecstasy.”
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