Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 11 –
“’Rossiyane’ is a much broader category than ethnic Russians, and our
compatriots,” Sergey Arutyunov says, are not only Russians in Canada or Argentina
but Tuvins in Xinjiang, Buryats in Shemekhen and Circassians in Syria or the
United Arab Emirates -- at least as long as they want to consider themselves to
be such.”
And this simple fact that ethnic and
political identities are not the same is something which “must be understood by
journalists and ministers, and neo-Cossacks and even governors, the head of the
Caucasus Department of the Moscow Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, says
in a remarkable review of three recent books on Circassians and their historical
memory.
In this case, a continued refusal by
Russian officials to recognize Circassians as compatriots with a right of
return, from a fear that the influx of a large number of them could further
destabilize the North Caucaus, risks alienating not ony the more than five
million Circassians who live abroad but also the 500,000 plus who live in their
traditional homeland.
That is just one of the observations
that Arutyunov makes in a review essay which may seem abstract and theoretical
but which have enormous practical consequences and which, to the extent they
are acknowledged, could open the way to a better future for those peoples (zapravakbr.ru/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=411%3A2013-08-06-10-24-30&catid=5%3Aanalinic&Itemid=7).
The three books he considers in the
4300-word review essay are Emilia Sheudzhen’s “The Adygs (Circassians) in
Historical Memory” (Moscow and Maikop, 2010), Fatima Ozova’s “Studies on the
Political History of Circassia” (Pyatigorsk and Cherkessk, 2013), and Marina
Khakuasheva’s “In Search of Lost Meaning” (Nalchik, 2013).
All three are in Russian but mostly
published in the North Caucasus, all three are by young Circassian women
scholars, and all wrestle with the problems of history and historical memory as
these two themes are playing out in the contemporary lives of what was once the
largest nation in the region and is still a terribly important one.
The issues these three raise take on
added importance, the Moscow ethnographer says, because “alongside the
classical diaspora people, the Jews, [the Circassians] are the people with the
largest share of their number living abroad, by certain estimates up to
nine-tenths of their total number.”
And their significance is elevated
still further by two additional realities: the Circassians bore the brunt of “the
struggle with the colonial policy of Russian stardom,” and they have achieved
in recent years “greater successes in restoring and establishing anew their
culture, writing, oral and literary language, and multi-faceted historical
tradition.”
Earlier this year, Arutyunov notes,
people in the Caucasus and around the world marked the 150th
anniversary of the end of the Caucasian war. Because they suffered “the
greatest losses” in that conflict and becausae most of them were then expelled
frm their homeland at its end, the Circassians took the lead in seeking to
recover memory about these events.
And because the Sochi Olympiad was
held at the same time as the anniversary and on the place where the expulsion
of the Circassians took place, “the anniversary received broad international
coverage.” Some of this coverage was tendentious, Arutyunov says, but the three
books he reviews are examples of a more judicious approach.
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