Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 29 – Many of the two
dozen peoples of the far north of the Russian Federation regularly complain
that they are discriminated against and otherwise mistreated by Russian
officials. But efforts by two ethnic groups to be officially listed in their
category suggest that the situation of other small peoples outside of the north
may be even worse.
The two peoples in question, the
Siberian Tatars and the Pomors, represent two very different situations. Both
would appear to qualify as at least portions of them live in the far north and
each numbers fewer than 50,000, but including them nonetheless presents
problems to Moscow (csipn.ru/glavnaya/novosti-regionov/2022-sibirskie-tatary-i-pomory-prosyatsya-v-spisok-korennykh-malochislennykh-narodov-severa-sibiri-i-dalnego-vostoka#.VeHVRpcWIbM).
But for either or both to be
included in the list will require them to overcome skepticism and even
opposition in Moscow and almost certainly prompt other numerically small groups
south of the traditional homeland of numerically small indigenous peoples of the
north to seek to be included as well.
The Siberian Tatars, who in the 2010
census numbered 8,000, have perhaps the weaker claim given that only 600 of
their total live in the far north and most of whom long ago gave up their
traditional way of life. Protecting that is the ostensible basis for including
any group into the “numerically small indigenous peoples of the North, Siberia
and the Far East.
Despite that, they are working hard
to be on the list. Mukhaammet Kalimullin, a Siberian Tatar from Tyumen, told a
meeting there that his “people is in extremely critical situation” because it
lacks such “official recognition.” And such recognition would allow the introduction
of the Siberian dialect of Tatar in the schools of Tyumen.
At present, he said, “what is taught
there now is not our language,” Kalimullin said. Tyumen historian Aleksandr
Yarkov said he supports the idea but questioned whether the Siberian Tatars
really qualify as a people of the north because fewer than 10 percent of them
live in that region.
The Pomors certainly would appear to
qualify: They number only 2,000; they maintain a traditional way of life; and
their entire community is in the high north. Thus it is not surprising that
they have been trying to be recognized as a numerically small people of the North
for two decades.
But their current effort, one
centered on an Internet petition to the president and prime minister of the
Russian Federation, highlights the problems they face: They have support in the
Arkhangelsk administration but almost none in Moscow where, it appears, some
are concerned that the Pomors are generally classed as a sub-ethnos of the
Russian nation.
To list them as a numerically small
people of the north could lead more of them to demand census status as a
separate nationality, a claim that if realized would not only cut into the
total number of ethnic Russians in the country but also call into question the
unity of ethnic Russians on which Vladimir Putin places so much emphasis..
The Pomors counter that there is
already a people considered to be a Russian sub-ethnos on the list: the
Kamchadals, one of the more obscure ethnic communities in the Russian
Federation but one that calls into question many of the ideological themes of
contemporary Russian national discourse.
On the one hand, the Kamchadal
subethnos came into existence as a result of the intermarriage of ethnic
Russians with local nationalities in the Far East. And on the other, despite
assumptions about the inevitability of Russian assimilation in such
circumstances, the Kamchadals have maintained their distinctive identity and
way of life.
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