Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 16 – Ayder Muzhdabayev,
deputy chief editor of “Moskovsky komsomolets” and himself a Crimean Tatar,
says that some recent comments he has heard in the Russian capital have helped
him to understand all too well “how the Third German Reich arose” and thus the
threat that Russia now faces.
In a post on Ekho Moskvy, Muhdabayev
says that he has been shocked by some of the things he has heard. One friend, he says, suddenly remarked, “I
don’t like how these Jews conduct themselves,” adding “I hate the Jews! Let
them all disappear somewhere or other” (echo.msk.ru/blog/aiderm/1177352-echo/).
Just where the Jews were supposed to
go, the editor continues, was not his concern just as initially it was not a concern
of many people in Germany in the 1920s who complained that the Jews “has seized
all trade” in that country. Other
people, “druzhinniki and activists,” would deal with that.
“First the Jews, then the Roma, then
the gays, then the mentally ill – everything went in its turn,” Muzhdabayev
says. That is how Nazism began in
Germany, “in simple conversations which did not appear to mean anything … Some
spoke openly; others remained silent.” But such conversations made what
happened later possible.
Not long ago, the editor said, one
of his acquaintances said, “I hate Chechens.” When he asked him why, the woman replied
“I simply hate them, and that is all there is to it.” She hadn’t fought in Chechnya and she clearly
felt that she could say this “without risking anything” because she clearly
felt that “everyone was in solidarity with her.”
Another friend recently told
Muzhdabayev tht “we are building a Russian Orthodox state.” When asked about the constitution’s promise
of a secular and multi-national society, his friend couldn’t answer because “clearly
he still hadn’t thought about it. But his words were “hard.” The state must be Russian and Orthodox “and
all others must have fewer rights.
Although the editor expressed the hope
that such hateful phrases were nothing more than chance remarks, “the fact
remains that one after another, people whom I have known well for a long time,
people of my circle, are having their nationalist coming out [he uses the English term] in front of me.”
The “strange and demonstrative hatred
never lived in these people before,” Muzhdabayev says. It’s possible they are
simply following the fashion of the day. But he says, “a wall is growing
between us. Yes, this is not the wall of a ghetto or a concentration camp (although
time will tell), but a wall which precisely divides us into ‘us-them’ or ‘you
are for these or for ours?’”
What is truly disturbing about this, the
editor concludes, is that these ideas aren’t being expressed by “a clutch of
skinheaded Nazis.” If that were all, they could be easily dealt with. Instead,
such ideas are entering the daily converstions of ordinary and even educated
Russians. Consequentlly, fascism in
Russia is growing because it has become “presentable” – and all the more
dangerous because of that.
Some might be tempted to dismiss Muzhdabayev’s
words as merely anecdotal, but there is lots of evidence to show that
tragically that is not the case. A new
poll shows that 81 percent of Muscovits support the demands of the Russians of
Biryulevo and worse 41 percent approve of the methods that the protesters used
against the gastarbeiters (superjob.ru/research/articles/111343/81-moskvichej-podderzhivayut-trebovaniya-zhitelej-biryulevo-41-odobryaet-i-metody-ih-dejstvij/).
And such attitudes are currently found
among Russians across the country, with demonstrations in support of those who
attacked the gastarbeiters in Moscow now having taken place in Stavropol,
Krasnodar, Yekaterinburg, Saratov, Rostov-na-Donu, and Astrkhan, among other
places (nazaccent.ru/content/9373-akcii-v-podderzhku-protestuyushih-v-biryuleve.html).
Moreover, other close observers of
the Russian scene suggest that anti-immigrant and anti-minority sentiments are
intensifying with many now favoring not just visas for anyone coming to Russia
but blocking their ability to purchase housing or using public services nd even
“banning them” outright (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2013/10/15/1188106.html).
Russians have long comforted or at least
justified themselves by saying that the nation that defeated Hitler could not
be fascist, but the attitudes that Muzhdabayev and the others report and the
slogans of the Russian March set for November 4 suggest that there is ever less
comfort in and justification for that assumption (nazaccent.ru/content/9348-ne-edinaya-rossiya.html).
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