Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 22 – Yesterday,
five of Russia’s most senior human rights campaigners issued an appeal to the
country’s intelligentsia to do everything its members could to counter what
they called “the anti-immigrant hysteria” now sweeping the Russian Federation
and infecting “the broad popular masses.
But according to a report in another
Moscow paper today, there is little indication that the Russian intelligentsia
has responded, yet another indication of the demise of a group whose members
for more than 200 years served as Russia’s moral conscience and thus as a
critical counterweight to the authoritarian regimes in that country.
Lyudmila Alekseyeva of the Moscow
Helsinki Group, Svetlana Gannushkina of Civil Support, Lidiya Grafova of the
Resttlers Forum, Sergey Kovalev of the Sakharov Center and Arseniy Roginsky of
Memorial published an appeal to the intelligentsia in the pages of “Novaya
gazeta” (novayagazeta.ru/politics/59601.html).
Arguing that the anti-immigrant
hysteria threatens to drag Russia into a whirlpool of “hatred, the only way out
of which would be civil war,” the five called on members of the Russian
intelligentsia to speak out against what they described as “the cynical
exploitation” of xenophobia by the Kremlin for electoral and other purposes.
“In the eyes of the entire world,”
they wrote, Russia “is being transformed into a slave-holding state,” one in
which the powers that be hold its victims responsible. “Don’t you feel,
respected science and culture figures how a certain brown smell is filling the
skies over our country?” Aren’t you worried about this?
But at least so far, few of the
members of the Russian intelligentsia appear to be, according to Anatoly
Stepovoy in an article in “Novyye izvestiya.”
He said he had tried to contact some of its members to see if they
shared the sense of despair that the human rights activists feel (newizv.ru/politics/2013-08-22/187653-molchanie-altyn.html).
He
made “more than 30 telephone calls.” About a third of “our creative
intelligentsia,” Stepovoy said, “is now on vacation far from Russia and couldn’t
be reached. Another part refused to give a direct answer” to his
questions. And there were some “who
simply didn’t want to speak about this on an open telephone line.”
That pattern is discouraging but
perhaps not as surprising as it might have been only a few years ago because as
Tatyana Volkova, a lawyer who works on human rights issues, observes, in an
essay on the “Vestnik Civitas” portal, the Russian intelligentsia is
disappearing (vestnikcivitas.ru/pbls/3060).
“The intelligentsia as a phenomenon
survived the collapse of the Russian empire despite a colossal number of lost
lives and shattered fates, but,” Volkova argues, “it is not surviving the
collapse of the Soviet empire.” Indeed, she says, it may already have failed to
survive that cataclysm.
There are many reasons for that, the
Russian lawyer suggests, but one that is extremely important is the lack of
Western support. Soviet dissidents
received at least some, albeit “insufficient” backing from that quarter. But now
the situation has changed and not to the benefit of those who were members of
the intelligentsia.
Russian dissidents need Western
support now “even more” than in the past, she argues, but now there are many
fewer in the West who will say as they at least said 25 years ago to the
dwindling band of dissidents and intelligents in the Russian Federation “For
your freedom and ours!”
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