Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 28 – Provincial Russia
is not what it was 20 years ago or as many still imagine it to be, Simon
Kordonsky says. While it is true that some villages are in fact dying out,
others are attracting a variety of new people whose activities, although often unnoticed
and uncounted by Moscow, mean that rural Russia is in fact bubbling with “hidden
life.”
For the last decade, Kordonsky has
led a group of scholars at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics in investigating
what rural Russia is like, why it is now so different from what it was in the
past, and why because of these changes Moscow often fails to take it into
account in its approach to the country (opec.ru/1885527.html).
Among “the new people” of rural
Russia, his team has found, are “those who want to isolate themselves from
social contacts and government supervision, dacha owners, people who want to
live in harmony with nature, and sectarians.” In many cases, these people are
moving into places that have been deserted by their former residents.
Government statistics are very good
at recording the outflow of the older population and the supposed disappearance
of villages and other settlements, but they are much less good at recording “the
enormous number of the active population” which lives one place and works
another, or moves from one residence to another during the course of a year.
Kordonsky argues that “the system of
settlement in Russia has essentially changed over the last 25 years,” from one
in which the state determined where people would live to one in which
individuals make choices on their own for economic or other reasons.
On the one hand, that has led to an
emptying out of the original population in many rural areas. But on the other,
it has sparked a move in the other direction with “residents of major cities
beginning to move into the provinces,” a situation that is possible because
many Russians now have two or three homes, often at opposite ends of the
country.
Related to and reinforcing this is
the disappearance of traditional settlement forms and the appearance of new
communities, which have “intentionally isolated themselves from state supervision.”
On the basis of his team’s research, Kordonsky says, “we have come to
understand that hidden life is everywhere.”
Isolated communities are being
formed for various reasons, including “ecological, romantic,
philosophical-esoteric, social (flight from a technocratic world which is
globalized and spiritless), and deeply practical ones as well, such as the
striving to live in a self-sufficient way in the case of economic crises and other
cataclysms.”
Rural Russia is especially alive
along major transportation routes and in border areas because these give ample
opportunities to earn money through trade of various kinds. Those who fall into this category number as
many as five million, and among them are often religious sectarians who have
their own reasons for isolation.
According to Kordonsky’s team, “the
specific feature of Russia is that [its residents] remain nomads at heart,”
something that “radically distinguishes them from [their] European neighbors
who tend to live in one place only. Russians on the other hand may live in
Arkhangelsk but work elsewhere in central Russia or the Far East much of the year.
The dramatic increase in the number
of dacha owners – now some 60 million people – and the concomitant growth of
the 40 to 50 million people who support them represent yet another aspect of
life outside traditional Russian cities and villages. Such people are often far
more numerous on any given territory than are the original residents.
Other groups that have moved in as
others have left are some 10 million sectarians and almost as many more
agriculturalists who often take over villages that have become vacant. In many
cases, both groups remain “’outside the state’s field of vision.’” But they are very much there in fact.
Many of these new or new-old
settlements have no official status. That often means that any structures that
are erected have no official status and that those who live “outside the state”
are at least formally without the social services other Russians receive.
Relations between the new rural
Russians and the old ones vary widely. Often they coexist without much
interaction, but if the new rural Russians try to take too many resources,
there are conflicts – and these too remain outside of government regulation, by
design or by default.
At the same time, the Kordonsky team
found, the new rural Russians and the old rural Russians are cooperating in
interesting ways. The new ones use the Internet to sell products that the old
ones produce, benefiting both and allowing for rural life in Russia to thrive
in places where many thought it never could.
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