Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 22 – Like
Americans, most Russians view nationalism in a negative way, according to a
Russian Jewish émigré living in New York, but they will not be able to integrate their society and escape
from the Soviet past unless they take nationalism away from those who call
themselves Russian nationalists and make it part of their own value system.
In an essay in today’s “Nezavisimaya
gazeta,” Mikhail Dorfman discusses the complicated relationship between ethnic
and political identities in the Russian Federation and the ways in which the
aversion most Russians feel toward nationalism has landed them in increasingly
serious difficulties (ng.ru/politics/2013-08-22/3_kartblansh.html).
Dorfman’s reflections, he says, were
prompted by the recent case in which a St. Petersburg official decided a Tuvin
couldn’t be a citizen of the Russian Federation because the latter didn’t speak
Russian, a failure less of an understanding of geography than of history and
psychology.
Russians generally know that they
live in “a multi-national state,” a term that is included in the 1993 Constitution
but whose meaning is “rapidly disappearing,” Dorfman says. The reason for that is to be found in the
Soviet origins of Russian ethnic terminology and the impact of the demise of
the USSR on them.
Terms like “nationality,” “nation,”
and “people” were defined by Stalin’s theory on “the solution of the
nationality question.” They determined,
the writer says, what status a people had within the USSR and the attitudes
people there had to others both inside that country and beyond its borders.
“But together with the collapse of
the USSR, Stalin’s theory lost its meaning,” Dorfman suggests. And it is a
paradoxical outcome that “the phrase about a multi-national state was put into
the Constitution [precisely] when for the first time in its history, Russia had
become a nation state.”
The country still has non-Russian
regions, but “Russia’s multi-national character is deceptive. Russia now is a
mono-cultural and largely mono-lingual state. And if there is any threat to
Russian culture, then it hardly comes from national tensions inside of the
Russian Federation.”
According to Dorfman, “Moscow
Russians, Moscow Georgians, Tatars, Jews, Armenian or Ukrainians of the second
generation are all essentially people of one and the same Russian culture.
Their native language is Russian.” And
this is true not just of the capital but of all of “urban Russia.”
“Russians just like Americans react
negatively to the term ‘nationalism,’ although both the one and the other have
their own very strong nationalism,” not the nationalism “of marginal
fundamentalist, extremist and fascist groups which call themselves nationalists”
but “the powerful phenomenon which defined the history of the 20th
century.”
During the course of that century, Dorfman
continues, “nationalism replaced the old imperial arrangements.” No force, “not
monarchism, not social democracy and not communism” could successfully oppose it.
Even within the communist bloc, there were “nationalist phenomena” like the
USSR or the Polish Peoples Republic.
This “triumph of nationalism” was
accompanied by “a chain of large and small genocides and numerous crimes
against humanity,” but up to now “no one has pointed to an alternative path
toward the formation of a contemporary state.”
Within most nationalisms, there is an “imperial
component.” According to Dorfman, “the
phenomenon of British nationalism-imperialism is interesting because it was in
essence the first European nation,” one that grew out of the translation of the
Bible into English and the ancient Jewish idea of a state-nation given by the
Lord God.”
“For historical reasons,” he argues, “the
Russian national project has lagged behind and still lags behind even in
comparison to the Ukrainian.” The British have long been able to deal with a
combination of English, Scottish and Welsh nationalisms, but even “in the
Russian mainstream, people are still struggling with the term ‘Russian
nationalism’ on behalf of some imaginary [non-ethnic] Russian one.”
Among Russians there are still “survivals
of the past of imperial consciousness which refuse to Ukrainians and
Belarusians, peoples with a different national psychology and political
cultural than the Russians, the right to self-determination.” But cases around the world suggests such
opposition will ultimately fail.
“For a multitude of social-psychological
reasons,” Dorfman argues, “the identification of [non-ethnic] Russian will
inevitably lose to the [ethnic] Russian one,” and consequently, he says, “it is
time for society in Russia to nationalize the term ‘[ethnic] Russian’” and to
take back nationalism from those who use it.
“Only when the national project wins
will the idea of a common culture, one including the possibility of equality
for all other identifications – pensioner, Orthodox, Soviet, entrepreneur,
worker, intelligentsia and creative class – win out. Only when Russia cease to
have complexes about its Russianness will it become a country where societal
values are higher than ethnic ones.”
Dorfman concludes his article by
recalling his own service in the Soviet Army in Tuva where an official queried
him about his identification as a Jew on line five of his Soviet passport. The official accepted him as part of the
Soviet people and only wanted to know where he was from, despite the
anti-Semitic propaganda of the time.
Dorfman’s argument is intriguing and
suggestive, but there are at least three problems that he does not address,
problems that seem certain to make the Russian national project he talks about
far more problematic than he implies and perhaps ultimately impossible to
achieve.
First, just because people of one
nationality learn the language of another does not mean that they shift their
identities. Often their nationalism is spurred by this process: The Irish did not
become modern nationalists until they stopped speaking Gaelic and started
speaking English, and London faced a challenge to its empire not from
Hindi-speaking peasants but from an English trained lawyer named Gandhi.
Second, there are deep fissures within
Russian identity itself. Not only is it weaker than Dorfman appears to believe,
but many who may be listed in the census as Russians in fact now identify as
Cossacks, Siberians, Muscovites, or not in ethnic terms at all. Uniting them
will be an enormous challenge.
And third, there are many nationalities
within the Russian Federation who have no interest in sacrificing their cultures
to fuse with ethnic Russian culture and identity. If the Russian nation tries to insist on
that, they are likely to become ever more interested not just in resisting that
but in moving rapidly to create their own nation states independent of Russia.
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