Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 17 – Ramzan Kadyrov’s
opening yesterday of the Dadi-Yurt memorial to Chechen women who lost their
lives in the struggle against the Russian military in th 19th
century may unite Chechens, but it has already had a spillover effect not only
among Circassians in the North Caucasus but among Russians in Moscow.
Some Circassians are already complaining
that the leaders of their republics are not prepared to follow Kadyrov’s lead,
complaints that are likely to grow with time (hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/obzor/1372-kadyrov-ne-kanokov-on-ne-stesnyaetsya-stavit-pamyatniki-natsionalnym-geroyam).
And some Russian military personnel in
Moscow are upset that Moscow has not restored statues to Aleksey Yermolov, the
tsarist general who conquered the North Caucasus 150 years ago and whose most
famous statue, in Grozny, was destroyed by Cheche nationalists in 1989 (rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=62755).
But what is most interesting about this
new “monuments war” is an article by German Sadulyaev in today’s “Svobodnaya
pressa” in which he seeks to justify Kadyrov’s decision and explain the
dilemmas about the 19th century that the current Russian government
now faces in the 21st (svpressa.ru/society/article/74389/).
“It sometimes seems,” Sadulayev begins, “that
the leadership of the Chechen Republic is intentionally provoking the citizens
of Russia.” But this is not the case and only how things appear. In fact, Kadyrov is not interested in
provoking Russians, but he is trying to “unite and consolidate” the Chechen
people.
The Chechen leadership understands that
at some point, Moscow will stop subsidizing the republic and that it will have
to find a way to build its own economy almost from scratch. To do that, Grozny calculates, it needs a
unified people subordinate to a leader and capable of mobilization.
To that end, Sadulayev says, the Chechen
leadership is “not only making ‘lemonade out of lemons’ but turning into
victory even the most obvious defeat.” That Russians do not understand this
reflects their own problems rather than the problems of the Chechens as a
national community.
Russia and Chechnya are incomensurate
things, Sadulayev continues. Russia is a
large country and an international power.
Chechnya is a small part of it, with an interesting culture that
contains many “’survivals of the past’” but that is utterly incapable of
competing with or even seriously challenging Russia.
With regard to the Dadi-Yurt
memorial, Russians should recognize that this is about something long ago and
that the events it commemorated were truly complicated, with each side having
its own understanding, its own heroes and devils.
“In Soviet times,” this dilemma was
resolve for Russians by reference to “the tsarist regime” against whom the”freedom-loving
mountaineers struggled.” They did not
struggle against “Russians but against tsarist Russia, an empire, a conqueror
and a prisonhouse of peoples.”
But since 1991, the situation has
become more complicated. “If the USSR
could formally ‘break’ its link with tsarist Russia and ‘amnesty’ the enemies
of tsarism, then present-day Russia considers itself the heir of both the
Russian Empire and the Soviet Union” and does not have that opportunity.
The ideologists of Chechnya have
articulated their own story, one that reflects their lack of interest in
Russian history and regime change. First, the imperial Russians were bad and
the Chechens heroically fought with them.
Then the Russian Bolsheviks also were bad. Stalin deported them. Then
were the terrible Russian democrats: they bombed the Chechens.”
“And only when Putin, the sun king
arrived did everything change.” He “curbed the Russians.” In gratitude, “the
Chechens saved Russia.” And that,
Sadulayev says, is “the end of the film.”
But Russians can’t accept that
because since 1991 they have lacked a national ideology that explains who and
what they are, an ideology that reflects their importance in the world and
equally the lack of importance of such challengers as the Chechens. Sadulyev cites with approval Viktor Pelevin’s
question “Where is the Russian national idea?”
As the Dadi-Yurt monument and the controversy
around it show, “the Chechens have one, but the Russians do not.” Russians only
demean themselves by getting upset about what Kadyrov is doing, Sadulayev
concludes. They need to get over this if
they are to move forward as the Chechens are trying to do.
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