Paul Goble
Staunton, April 27 – The Western
media have kept close track of the growing list of world leaders who won’t be
attending Victory Day festivities in Moscow this year, but another trend that
may be more important – the decision of Russia’s CIS remaining partners no
longer even to speak about what Russians call the Great Fatherland War – has attracted
much less.
But as Svetlana Gamova of “Nezavisimaya gazeta”
puts it, that change means that “Russia is losing the last and, if you like,
the most important thing which connects it with the CIS countries – Victory in
the Great Fatherland War,” a conflict the non-Russians in the CIS now prefer to
call World War II (ng.ru/dipkurer/2015-04-27/9_victory.html).
While all of them will mark the
date, they will do so at home rather than in Moscow and under their own colors
rather than the black and yellow of the St. George ribbon, a decoration that
she suggests “has become the simple of the splitting apart of the Commonwealth
of Independent States.”
The Kremlin has tried to play down
this trend, she continues, excusing Belarusian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s
decision to mark the anniversary in Mensk not Moscow, but “ordinary Russians as
always have read between the lines: Lukashenka is openly distancing himself
from Moscow,” something confirmed by his decision not to use the St. George
ribbon.
Lukashenka
is hardly alone, Gamova says. Leaders in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Moldova
have taken equally demonstrative steps to show that they will commemorate World
War II in their own way and not jointly with the Russian one or employing the
symbols that Moscow prefers.
“Many
experts in the CIS countries suggest that this … is the result of the work of
NGOs and Western embassies,” the Moscow journalist says, another example of the
way in which many in that region seem incapable of accepting the idea that
peoples and governments can ever act on their own.
Others,
including Gamova herself, point to “the ineffective work or its complete
absence by representatives of the Russian Federal Agency for CIS Affairs and
Compatriots (Rossotrudnichestvo) and the International Foundation for
Humanitarian Cooperation among the CIS Member States.
She says
that officials in Moldova, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan say they know
nothing about Rossotrudnichestvo or have heard “something about it” but can’t
quite remember much. Moldovan
parliamentarians, for example, say they have never met with its
representatives, although they have heard about its work with Moldovan
gastarbeiters in Russia.
The
Russian government has allocated funds for this, she says, but things haven’t
worked out. The money has gone for a few conferences and public celebrations
but has not achieved the ends Moscow said it would. Neither Russians nor what she refers to as “’the
titular nations’ of the CIS countries take it at all seriously.”
But one “fact”
is obvious, the “Nezavisimaya gazeta” journalist concludes: “We have lost that
space which for many years we considered traditionally a zone of Russian
influence … and we will have to celebrate Victory Day in a dramatically
shrinking circle of former fellow fighters.”
No comments:
Post a Comment