Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 30 – Valery Engel,
director of the Moscow Institute for the Study of Problems of Nationality
Pollicy and Inter-Ethnic Relations, says there are four reasons why Russia is “more
tolerant” than other countries like those in Europe where xenophobic attitudes
are growing.
He made his comments in advance of the
International Day of the struggle with Fascism, Racism and Anti-Semitism, and
his upbeat assessment of the situation in Russia, one very much at odds with
those of others, suggests the way in which Moscow will seek to use that day
again this year (nazaccent.ru/content/22255-ekspert-nazval-chetyre-prichiny-po-kotorym.html).
The first reason for Russia’s success
in this regard, Engel says, is that it has “departed from the Soviet model
where the political nation was formed around ideas but has not moved toward the
European model which says that the state is created on the basis of the traditions
of the titular nation.”
The second reason Engel gives for
his conclusion is that “rightwing activists and Islamists have left to take
part in military conflicts in other countries, Syria and Ukraine,” thus
removing from the Russian scene many who promoted intolerance of other nations
in various ways in the past.
The third reasons is “the split
within the Russian national movement which occurred after the Ukrainian events.”
Some Russian nationalists support what Moscow has done; others oppose it; and
this division means that Russian nationalists cannot promote xenophobic
attitudes as effectively as they did.
And the fourth reason, Engel argues,
is that “at present, the population is extremely little interested in issues of
migration and nationalism.” Instead, they are focused on and agitated about
issues connected with their own economic status.
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