Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – That Russia’s
Anschluss of Crimea has re-ordered the international landscape is now common
ground as countries around the world recalibrate their foreign policies in the
face of what appears to be a fait accompli. But this annexation is also having
a dizzying impact on the Russian Federation’s own nationalities.
Indeed, in addition to the ramping
up of Kremlin-defined nationalism among ethnic Russians, Vladimir Putin’s moves
in Crimea and other parts of Ukraine are leading many of the non-Russians and
some sub-ethnic groups among the Russian ethnos to rethink who they are and
what they want.
Among these changes in the last few
days, three are particularly worthy of notice: a Karelian demand for the end of
Moscow’s occupation of their republic, the appearance of a Chuvash website that
monitors the balance between Russian and Chuvash language use, and the
promotion of an alternative regionally-based identity for ethnic Russians.
On Sunday,
Karelian regionals launched an online petition drive for the proclamation of
the restoration of the Ukhta Democratic Republic which was created in 1920 and
for an end to Russian genocide of the Karelian nation (nazaccent.ru/content/11332-karelskie-regionalisty-potrebovali-provozglasheniya-uhtinskoj-demokraticheskoj.html).
The petition calls on the
international community to help return sovereignty to the Ukhta Democratic
Republic via support for a referendum on that question. As Nazaccent.ru notes in reporting this,
activists in St. Petersbur and Kaliningrad have issued similar appeals since
Moscow orchestrated the so-called referendum in Crimea.
Supporters of these moves, the site
says, do not expect to win their case but they do hope to show that “in Russia,
referenda do not work.”
Meanwhile, in Chuvashia, a Christian
Turkic republic in the Middle Volga, Chuvash activists have published 700
photographs on a new site, pertanlah.livejournal.com/78453.html,
designed to show that officials are violating the law and not treating Chuvash
equally with Russian in public places (irekle.org/news/i1815.html).
“Pertanlah,” which in Chuvash means “equality,”
said that the new site will post additional pictures in the future to raise
public awareness about the ways in which officials are promoting the
displacement of the national language by Russian in “systematic violation” of
Russian Federation and Chuvash Republic law.
And finally and perhaps most importantly
over the longer term, a writer on the Sibpower.com portal argued yesterday that
“the Ruses [Rusy or Rusichi] are the only indigenous people of Russia,” not the
ethnic or non-ethnic Russians [russkiye or rossiyane] as defined by Moscow, and
that the Rus must invoke their constitutional right and proclaim that term as
their national identity (sibpower.com/novosti/rusichi-i-rus-sibirskaja.html).
The Rus, he says, must then “create
Rus autonomies” as the first step in a process to recover their national
dignity and to form “a Land of the Rus.” among these autonomies, he suggests,
would be the Autonomy of the Rusichi of Siberia, the Autonomy of the Rusichi of
the Urals, and so on.
This is not just a matter of names,
he argues, but rather of national survival because Moscow has transformed the
Ruses into Russians of its own definition and it is they, deprived of their
memory, who back the war against other Ruses, in this case, the Ukrainians. “Kyivan
Rus,” he says, “was transformed into Ukraine, while Moscow Rus became the
aggressive Soviet Moscovia.”
Before tsars and commissars
intervened, the Rus ideologist says, those now calling themselves Ukrainians
and those now calling themselves Russians, ethnic or otherwise, were not on
opposite sides of the barricades. Consequently, the only way to overcome this
division is to return to an understanding of the Rus-ness of both.
In the Russian Federation today, he
suggests, the Soviet mentality still dominates and it would be appropriate to
call its residents “Soviet or in general Muscovites, for today Moscow controls
all policy without taking into account the interests of the remaining peoples
and regions of Russia.”
Moscow today prohibits the appearance
of parties with Rus in the title. It prohibits regional parties. And consequently, “today we see Moscow’s
obvious colonial policy toard other Russian regions.” Those carrying out such imperialist policies “cannot
be called Rusichi or Ruses! They are Muscovites or Rossiyane.”
The only way forward, he argues, is
by “the decentralization of Muscovite power” and the rise of Rus autonomies
that can then form a new union, a view of Russians and Russian nationalism completely
at odds with Putin’s and just one more way in which the Kremlin’s seizure of
Crimea is echoing across the Russian Federation.
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