Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 19 – Moscow’s
failure to support ethnic identities in the North Caucasus has undermined the
ways such identities regulate behavior and opened the way to radicalization and
Islamism, and if the authorities do not change course, this deformation of
identities in the region is likely to call Russian control there into question.
Those are just some of the conclusions
that Ibragim Rashidov, a senior scholar at Daghestan State University, in an
article which is entitled “The Erosion of Ethnic Identification and Its
Consequences for the North Caucasus Region” and draws on theories like those
developed by Erik Erikson (gazavat.ru/history3.php?rub=21&art=706).
Many
see the actions of North Caucasians in Russian cities and elsewhere as a
manifestation of their ethnic identities, but Rashidov argues that what people
are actually observing is the result of the deformation and erosion of
traditional identities and hence the looseningof the control functions such
identities have.
The
forces of globalization, on the one hand, and of Soviet policies, on the other,
have changed the nature of ethnic self-identification in the Caucasus, creating
a crisis for both individuals and groups and leading in both to “frustration,
depression, aggressiveness and internal conflict.”
“The
threat of the loss of ethnic identity and even more its loss is conceived by
bearers of this identity as a threat to the existence of the ethnos and its
annihilation,” the Makhachkala scholar argues. And the energies released in
this process are manifested in many negative ways, including “armed conflicts and
wars.”
The
state must understand and then combat this loss of identity if it is to
maintain stability, but the Soviet and even more the Russian state has shown by
its actions that it does not understand the relationship between identities and
stability and has taken actions that undermine identities of most if not all
ethnic groups.
Despite
its claims, Rashidov says, “the Russian Federation is in essence a unitary
state, in many espects harsher in that regard than was the USSR. Neither the
organization of the state … nor its legislation takes into account the
poly-ethnicnature and poly-cultural nature of the population.”
In Daghestan,
for example,”only Russian successfully fulfills the government function in he
full sense.” No other language does so, and increasingly members of other
ethnic groups learn about themselves and interact with others not with the self-confidence
of having their own language but precisely because they do not.
An “entire
generation of people” who are members of one or another ethnos but do not know
their native language and who speak Russian, dress in the European way, and are
cut off from their national identities and traditions has emerged. “Who are these
people,” Rashidov quotes Daghestani sociologist A-N. Z. Dibirov as asking.
And he cites
Dibirov’s answer: “To the extent that thesepeoples who do not have their own
information channels receive information from other states [via another
language and tradition], what is formed among them is not a national but a
colonial mentality which ignoes their own spiritual values.”
But this trend
has an unexpected outcome, Rashidov continues.While “objectively” such people
are less ethnically distinct from others than they were, “subjectively” they
are more sensitive to how others see them and react accordingly. That is what is known in sociology, he says,
as “the ethnic paradox.”
Specifically, “the
loss of language and the loss of a name is the loss of identity. The erosion of
ethnic identification inevitably lead to the destruction of ethnic and moral
barriers and restrictions in society both at the level of the individual and at
that of society as a whole.” These people in Daghestan are now being called “the
15th nationality,” a group caught between traditional identities and
a new one and acting more emotionally than rationally and thus “easily
manipulated” by other.
“It is obvious,”
Rashidov says, “that precisely the representatives of this ‘nationality’ are
today the main objets of the religious expansion of Islam to the extent that
subjective ethnic self-identification, deprived of its objective foundations is
involved in a search for firmer bases of identity” and is more hostile to the
cultural values of others.
“In ethnic
cuture, the most important role belongs to tradition,” and this “tradition
fulfills the function of a selection mechanism relative to innovations.” Some
new things are accepted but others are rejected. When the tradition itself is
weakened or even destroyed, then there is little left to restrain members of
the group from radical shifts in ideas and behavior.
If Moscow wants
to channel the energies of the members of these communities in a positive
direction, Rashidov says, it must be sensitive to this problem, stop
outmigration, create infrastructure to support identities, restore traditional
control mechanisms, and create conditions to prevent the demise of non-Russian
languages.
Unfortunately, “the
national and demographic policy conducted by the Russian Federation regarding the
indigenous peopes of the North Caucasus has led to catastrophic deformations of
their ethnic values, involving a significant erosion of their ethnic norms, the
degradation of the traditional system of values, and the reduction of their
ability to revent conflict.”
To avoid disaster, Russian policy
must be radically changed, he concludes, because “inattention to the problems
of the defense of the ethnic identities of the indigenous peoples of the
North Caucasus inevitably will lead to a greater humanitarian catastrophe in
the Caucasus and destroy Russian statehood there.”
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