Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 26 – The current war
in Ukraine is “a battle between the Russian myth about Ukraine and the
Ukrainian myth about itself,” a reflection of the fact that the contemporary
world is among other things “a symbolic space” and that “one myth can be
defeated only with the help of another myth,” according to Pavel Kazarin.
A myth, he points out in “Ukrainskaya Pravda,”
“is not a synonym for the word ‘invention.’” In classical Greece, it referred
to the concept of how an individual viewed the world and his place in it. A
myth is an idea “about the universe’s architecture, about past and future,
about values and taboos” (pravda.com.ua/rus/articles/2015/04/24/7065788/?attempt=1).
Nowhere is this problem more critical
than in the case of Crimea where there is a well-articulated “Russian myth” but
no Ukrainian one has appeared “up to now,” Kazarin says. And as a result, “Ukraine
uses the Crimean Tatar one.”
“The Russian concept of Crimea” includes
such things as the defense of Sevastopol, the “Crimean Riviera,” Pushkin,
Wrangel, the withdrawal of the White Army to Bizerte, and the second defense of
Sevastopol – all things which serve to justify a Russian status for the
Ukrainian peninsula.
Some say that “the Russian Crimea myth
is in fact ‘a Soviet myth’ both in terms of the time of its creation and its
realization,” Kazarin says. “Yes, that
is possible,” he says, but one thing is undeniable: “it exists,” and it serves
Moscow’s purposes. There is no alternative Ukrainian myth; there is only the
Crimean Tatar one, which Ukrainians use.
The Crimean Tatar myth about Crimea is
well-developed: it involves the story of a motherland taken from its people,
the mass deportation, and the destruction of its language and culture by
Russian occupiers.
“The weak point of the Crimean Tatar myth is that it is
not inclusive but exclusive,” Kazarin says. “It is defensive and directed at the
preservation of the borders of a group and not on their broadening,” a pattern
that reflects the experience of the Crimean Tatars after the return for
deportation as a minority in their own land.
But that gives rise to a problem with this myth: “It is
difficult to be part of it if you are not a Crimean Tatar, because this myth
looks toward the establishment of a national-territorial autonomy, quotas in
the offices of governance, and a system of preferences.” And because of that, “it
helps mobilize not only its supporters but also its opponents.”
“Today,” Kazarin continues, “Ukraine ever more
frequently uses precisely the Crimean Tatar myth,” largely because “over the
last 20 years, a uniquely Ukrainian concept about the peninsula has not
appeared.” Kyiv’s authority there is “legal
from the point of view of law but it hasn’t been legitimized by mythology.”
Ukraine
has “all the preconditions” necessary for the elaboration of its own myth about
Crimea. It is simply the case, Kazarin says, that this myth won’t be about
military conquest or about historical or religious issues but rather about
economics, about Crimea as an economic hub for the Black Sea region, as
Ukrainian economist Andrey Klimenko has suggested.
A Ukrainian myth so constructed, the Kyiv commentator
says, would be inclusive and appropriate for all regardless of ethnicity. But
so far, because “inertia has turned out to be strong,” Ukrainians have not
advanced it. Many think they don’t have
to because the Crimean Tatar myth justifies Kyiv’s position.
But Kyiv’s failure to advance its own myth, Kazarin
suggests, opens the way for Moscow to push its own. And it is “characteristic”
of the Ukrainian approach that “the law on the restoration of the rights of
those deported on the basis of ethnicity” was adopted by the Verkhovna Rada
only a month after the Russian Anschluss.
Russia briefly tried to “privatize the Crimean
Tatar” mythology by giving their language official status, but that effort
collapsed with Moscow’s moves against the ATR television channel and its
attacks on activists.
“Someone may say that all this is secondary, that
economics and the military define politics,” Kazarin says, but anyone who does
is “wrong.” That is because the
contemporary world is a symbolic space, and those who control the symbols often
control the politics more than those with the arms or the money.
Ukrainians should reflect on this, Kazarin says, as well
as on the fact that Moscow has defined Crimea as “’a Russian Jerusalem,’”
something it has never said about the Donbas.
And if they do, he suggests, they will want to articulate their own
Crimea myth in order to do battle with and defeat Russia’s version.
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