Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 4 – No one doubts
that for the Russian Federation as a whole, ethnic Russians for the present constitute
a majority of the population; but in various parts of the country, including in
many of the non-Russian republics, they now form a minority and one that is
moreover rapidly declining in size.
Because Russian law and practice
allows ethnic minorities certain rights and privileges, that situation has
provoked what may be the most unexpected and potentially dangerous question:
should ethnic Russians in these situations have the right to act like a
national minority, demanding support from the state to ensure their national
survival?
In a commentary entitled “Questions
without Answers” on Nazaccent.ru devoted to the All-Russian Forum on State
Support for National Minorities that recently concluded in Cheboksary, Igor
Volkov observes that it is far from clear what the organizers had in mind when
they spoke about “national minorities” (nazaccent.ru/content/20085-voprosy-bez-otvetov.html).
The Cheboksary commentator points
out that “in Russian law, there is a norm according to which a people numbering
less than 50,000 is numerically small and falls under the particular attention
of the state which provides it with a multitude of preferences.” But these were not the peoples represented at
this meeting.
Instead, Volkov says, the
participants were “representatives of the republics and oblasts of the Volga
Federal District.” And thus it would be
interesting to find out “who then in that district is a minority: the five
million Tatars, the 1.5 million Chuvash, or the 600,000 Maris.” And that raises
the question: just who or what is “’a national majority’”?
Of course, “the majority is the most
numerous ethnos of Russia the ethnic Russians.” But that is true “only if you
take the country as a whole.” In many
republics, “where thanks to various circumstances including the policy of the
local ethnocracy, ethnic Russians are becoming ever fewer; and they already are
not a majority.”
Should that mean that “Russians in
this situation” should receive support as a minority nationality? Or is the goal of “the preservation and development
of the unique culture of the peoples of Russia” something that “in principle”
is not something they can have access to?
According to Volkov, the forum didn’t provide an answer.
But the issue isn’t trivial, he
argues. One thing the Cheboksary session
did focus on was the efforts by republic governments, including Chuvashia’s, to
promote ethnic survival of their co-ethnics living outside of the borders of
the republics by organizing summer camps and other measures at government
expense.
Such measures, Volkov says, are fine
but what should be the limits especially given that tax money is involved.
Should multi-national republics support only the titular nationality as is the case
now? Or should they support all the nationalities? And should nationalities
like Russians who don’t have a national republic nonetheless support co-ethnics
elsewhere?
“The majority of peoples of Russia
live dispersed across the enormous spaces of [the country].” How are they to act, as “the ethnic
self-consciousness of citizens” intensifies? Why shouldn’t ethnic Russians have
the same right to promote their co-ethnics as do those groups classified as “ethnic
minorities” given that in many places Russians are in that status?
If Chuvashia or Tatarstan finances support
for Chuvash or Tatar groups beyond their republics, why shouldn’t Vladimir and
Yaroslavl oblasts do the same for ethnic Russians “beyond the borders of their
regions?” That is something the
Cheboksary meeting could usefully have discussed, Volkov says.
There are at least three
consequences of such discussions. First of all, demands by Russians that they
should have the same rights as ethnic minorities because they are one almost
certainly will be used by some in Moscow and elsewhere to insist that
non-Russians shouldn’t have these rights, thus eliminating some of the protections
minorities now have.
Second, if Russians are successful
in advancing such demands, that they be allowed to act like an ethnic minority,
that will not only intensify Russian nationalist attitudes but give aid and
comfort to those who want to see the formation of federal subjects explicitly
identified as ethnically Russian, a development that would intensify ethnic
tensions in the country.
And third, even the discussion of
this issue will exacerbate tensions between Russians and non-Russians with each
deciding that the other is getting something they don’t have. Many focus on the fact that non-Russians, for
good reasons, feel that way; now, as Volkov suggests, many Russians are feeling
the same way.
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