Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 26 – A Russian
commentator who insists that Belarus and the Belarusian language do not exist
despite efforts by Poles, Trotskyites, and Russophobes to promote them says
that at present Belarus is “leaving the Russian world on the sly” by promoting
pre-school instruction in Belarusian “ by hook or by crook.”
In terms that recall some of the
worst and most ignorant memes of Soviet propaganda, Alla Bron says that this
tactic is part of Minsk’s effort to try to “overcome the irredentist attitudes
of Belarusians, the absolute majority of whom want to reunite with their big
Motherland, Russia” (regnum.ru/news/polit/2196715.html).
According to Bron, only three groups
of people in Belarus speak Belarusian: broadcasters, instructors in Belarusian
language, and the Russophobic opposition. “The first two do so only at work,
and the third only when people are watching. When ‘the Moskali’ aren’t
listening, they speak Russian.”
“In certain regions of Belarus,” the
Regnum commentator continues, “there exist at the village level particular
Belarusian dialects which the Russophobes consider a language. But Belarusian
dialects vary from one region to another, and they in no way come together to
form a separate language.”
According to her, “by their lexical
content, the Belarusian dialects do not have any relationship to the literary
Belarusian language overfilled with Polonisms that was created in the 1920s and
1930s under the leadership of the Trotskyites who later were cleansed from
power by Stalin.”
Bron says that “the very idea of a
separate Belarusian nation appeared [only] at the end of the 19th
century” when Poland was interested in promoting a halfway house between
Russians and Poles and when the earlier religious halfway house, Uniatism, was
declaring in importance in the region.
She insists that before 1917, “the
idea of a new nation existed only in narrow circles of the Russophobic
intelligentsia. After the Polish-Soivet war, Western Belarus and Western Ukraine
became part of restored Poland.” But in
the eastern portions of Belarus and Ukraine, apologists of the new ‘nations’
found protection from the Trotskyites who wanted to divide and destroy the
Russian nation as too ‘conservative.’”
Given that these “’Belarusianizers’”
cooperated with the Germans during World War II, Stalin “destroyed them and
stopped Belarusianization. But after the collapse of the USSR,” those who took
book in Minsk “began again their black work” against Russia, Bron argues.
“Many suggest that Lukashenka began
active Belarusianization approximately three years ago after the Maidan in
Ukraine. But this is not the case,” Bron says.
In fact, “Belarusianization began immediately after the formation of a
separate Belarusian state.” That is “absolutely
logical,” she says.
According to her, “any system acts
like a living organism and struggles against any threats to its existence. For
the Belarusian state, such a threat is that the Belarusians are not a national
group but only a local identity within the Russian people. In a national state,
it is unthinkable not to have nation building.”
Lukashenka initially froze this out
of the hope that he could take power in Moscow and later because he needed
Russian money to survive. But
Belarusianization was taking place even then. It only became more intense and
more obvious in the last three years, however many people in Russia “refuse to
believe this.”
Minsk’s policies, Bron says, have created
what she calls “an idiotic formula” in which Belarusians say that Russian is a
foreign language and Belarusian is a native one even though they do not want to
study it because it leads nowhere. Consequently, the most Russophobic of the
Belarusians are promoting the study of Belarusian in pre-school institutions.
Parents should move their children
out of such institutions, Bron says. Otherwise, there is a risk that their
children will never learn Russian well or will speak it with an accent and
always be viewed as somehow marginal and second-rate. Belarusian, she suggests, isn’t a real
language and isn’t going to survive.
“In the era of the Internet, old and
really existing languages are disappearing one after the other. Even many
European languages several decades from now will cease to exist,” she says. “What
then can one say about the prospects of those that have come into existence
only recently?”
Bron concludes: “The Belarusian language
is needed only for those for whom it was thought up in the first place, for the
gradual transformation of Russians into Poles. If you are a Russophobe,” she
says, “study Polish now,” not Belarusian. There really is no need for this “intermediate
step.”
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