Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 27 – Andrey Parubiy,
the speaker of the Verkhovna Rada, is among those who say that Ukraine today
should be seen not as a newly independent stat which arose as a result of a
declaration in August 1991 but as a continuation of the Ukrainian Republic of
1918-1920 that was suppressed and occupied by the Soviets.
As a result, he says, August 24th
should be marked not as the Day of Independence but rather that Day of the
Restoration of Independence and that this should be fixed by law (censor.net.ua/news/402991/spiker_parubiyi_vystupil_za_priznanie_radoyi_24_avgusta_dnem_vosstanovleniya_nezavisimosti_ukrainskoyi).
That may seem a matter of
hairsplitting to many, but in fact, it not only has enormous consequences – including
the implication that between 1920 and 1991, Ukraine lived under Muscovite
occupation – but is part of a general trend among many post-Soviet states to
recover their pre-Soviet history and stress continuity with it as the Soviet
period recedes into the past.
It has long been generally accepted that
since 1991, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have had an easier path than the
former Soviet republics in large measure because they, unlike all the others,
stressed their continuity with the pre-war republics, insisted on legal
continuity and occupation, and have thus been engaged in restoring rather than
creating something entirely new.
Over the first two post-Soviet decades,
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia have devoted varying amounts of official attention
to and celebration of the anniversaries of their pre-Soviet statehood, most
prominently in 2008 on the 90th anniversary and with plans for the
centenary in 2018 (windowoneurasia.blogspot.com/2008/06/window-on-eurasia-caucasus-countries.html).
The efforts of the three Transcaucasus
countries to insist that they have a pre-Soviet past they can look to and build
on does not in the nature of things put them in the same position as the three
Baltic countries – their earlier experience was both far shorter and far more
troubled – but it does set them apart from the other post-Soviet states.
Parubiy’s statement suggests that at least
some in Ukraine would like to see their country also stress its continuity with
the previous period of Ukrainian independence. In doing so, such people clearly
hope to stress that Ukrainians have a state tradition that is separate from
that of Russia/USSR.
But there may be more immediate reasons
behind this move as well. On the one hand, an emphasis on state continuity more
than implicitly suggests that what occurred between 1920 and 1991 was a Russian
occupation. And on the other, that in
turn implies as the Baltic countries have insisted and the world agrees that
formerly occupied countries have special rights.
Both these things can mobilize Ukrainians
whose country is now being invaded and subverted by the Russian Federation,
promoting a deeper sense of patriotism among them and a sense that their state
is no recent arrival but something with a real political history that they can
look to and be proud of.
Unfortunately, there is another
consequence of such stress on continuity. The period between 1917 and 1920 in
Ukraine was a profoundly troubled one, and there are pages in it that no
Ukrainian or anyone else can be especially proud. Russian propagandists are
certain to pick up on that if Kyiv does decide to emphasize its continuity with
the earlier Ukrainian state.
No comments:
Post a Comment