Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 17 – For decades,
Circassians have marked May 21 as a day of sorrow, the anniversary of their
expulsion from Russia in 1864 and an event many view as an act of
genocide. Until recently, they did so
only privately but beginning in 1989, they have held public ceremonies in the
North Caucasus, and three years ago, began to do so in Moscow as well.
But unlike in 2014 and 2015, this
year the Moscow authorities have turned them down, refusing several requests
and explain in some that this is because of scheduling conflicts. The
Circassians are uncertain whether they believe what they are being told, but
they are upset and fear this points to even more neglect of their issues and
more repression of their activists.
However, it is entirely possible
that Moscow will regret its action because it is likely to energize Circassians. As one pointed out, when officials in the
North Caucasus tried to block such demonstrations, that only led more
Circassians to take part in informal ones and to demand that their issues be
addressed (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/282623/).
That Circassian pointedly added that
the Circassians have carefully played by the rules in seeking permission for
ceremonies and that “prohibitions on the carrying out of such measures will
have just the opposite effect,” especially given that the Russian authorities now
refuse to address Circassian issues as legitimate but instead cast them as the
work of foreign forces.
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