Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 17 – Buryats in
Buryatia laughed when the first reports came in that Buryats were fighting for
Moscow in Ukraine. They cried when the first bodies and injured Buryats were
returned to their homeland. But they have had quite enough with the Kremlin’s
latest effort to exploit them as spokesman for “a Russian world from sea to
sea.”
In a commentary on Ekho Moskvy,
Buryat journalist Aleksandra Garmazhalova writes that Buryat casualties from
the war in Ukraine had already sparked social and political tensions in her
republic, even though Russian officials “insistently recommended that local
media ‘not touch this theme’” (echo.msk.ru/blog/garmazhapova/1585974-echo/).
Nonetheless, because of the interest
of the Buryats in their co-nationals, some independent journals, like “Novaya
Buryatia,” took it up and even tried to raise money to help the injured.
Buryats also learned that those who had gone to Ukraine had done so only
because they were promised enormous sums of money.
All this was “unpleasant,”
Garmazhalova writes, but people were prepared to tolerate it. But their
tolerance for Moscow’s exploitation of Buryats in the Ukrainian war ended when
the Russian government put out its “Putin’s Militant Buryats’” video clip a
week ago and when that clip (youtube.com/watch?v=Y5avTS5H7o0)
went viral.
The statements by those featured on
the clip in support of “the Russian world” were too much. Buryat models
Viktoria Maladayeva and Mariya Shantanova denounced them as did Buryat director
Solbon Lygdenov who was upset, as many Buryats are, that any small group would
presume to speak for all Buryats on such things.
It quickly became know, the Buryat
journalist says, that those involved in the clip were all “activists from
Irkutsk” rather than from Buryatia proper. That led many Buryats to breathe a
sigh of relief: “Well, thank God, at least they aren’t ours.”
But that is not “the main thing,”
Garmazhalova says. “In [her] worst nightmare,” she writes, she “could not
imagine that Buryats (not as volunteers but all the same) would go to fight for
‘the Russian world’ given that they would have to know what the imposition of
imperial ideology and nationalism would mean for [them].”
Buryats know from their own
experiences that what the Rogozins and Zhirinovskys complain about in Ukraine
really exists in Russian cities and that they are the victims of the worst kind
of ethnic discrimination and mistreatment.
Buryats and members of other ethnic minorities
in Russia “have become accustomed not to leave home on November 4 (the Day of
National Unity) and on April 20 (Adolf Hitler’s birthday).” They also “are
accustomed that the police will check our passports,” that they will find it
hard to rent an apartment or even get a job.
In many Russian cities, “apartments
are now rented ‘only to Russians,’” and people are hired for work in those
places only if they have “’a Slavic appearance.’” And in addition, the Buryat
journalist writes, “we have become accustomed to hear from acquaintances” that
Russians transfer their children to other schools if there are “too many”
minority pupils.
Many may remember that a Buryat was
not allowed to win the Mrs. St. Petersburg contest because officials said “’the
first beauty in a European city could not be a Buryat woman.” And they may also
recall that Elmira Abdrazakova, who did win the Miss Russia contest in 2013 was
abused as someone who should never have been named “the main Russian beauty.”
Given all that, how can anyone think
that “we want ‘a Russian world’ ‘from sea to sea,’” a world in which there are
the “’titular’” people and “’the outcasts?’” Garmazhalova says that she would
not presume to speak for everyone but as for herself, she wants “simply a world
for all” in which all are treated equally and fairly.
Not long ago, she continues, a
Russian came up to her in the St. Petersburg metro and said she should give up
her seat to him because she, “as a representative of ‘a lower caste,’” should
defer to him as a member of “’a higher caste.’”
When she responded that if he didn’t like to use public transportation,
he should buy a Ferrari, the situation almost degenerated into a fight.
Such individuals “like Russia as a
whole” need to “learn to respect others.”
But “that perhaps is too difficult?
It is much simpler to solve a problem with one’s fists and tanks.”
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