Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – Sometimes the
most devastating critiques of an idea come from their nominal supporters. The
latest example of this? A scholar who
backs the Russian civic nation [rossiiskaya
natsiya] idea says it will involve Russianizing and Russifying the country’s
non-Russians just as many of the latter have long argued.
In a 2000-word essay in Nezavisimaya
gazeta, Yury Granin, a senior scholar at the Moscow Institute of Philosophy
argues that “the project of a ‘Civic Russian nation’ must be completed” in
order to integrate via russianization and russification the country’s
non-Russian nations (ng.ru/ideas/2017-03-29/11_6960_nacia.html).
To that end, he says, Russians must recognize
that the opponents of a civic Russian nation aren’t the people of the country
as a whole but non-Russian ethnocratic elites and that the only way forward is
to Russify the non-Russians both by increasing the use of Russian and by having
Moscow impose a common and ethnically Russian cultural “code” on all of them.
Unless and until that happens, the
Moscow philosopher says, Russia will not be able to produce real patriots and
will remain at risk of disintegrating as did the Russian Empire in 1917 and the
Soviet Union in 1991, something that no Russian government can allow to happen
yet again.
Of course, Granin says, one can
understand the unwillingness of “political and intellectual elites of the
national republics” to lose the status of “nation” for their federal subjects;
but no one should be confused by the euphemistic language that the Russian
population as a whole isn’t ready for that. The Russian people and the Russian
state are.
According to the Moscow philosopher,
the source of many problems in this area is the lack of agreement on what is a
nation. Some interpret it primarily as a political community; others as an
ethnocultural one; and still others, including Valery Tishkov who follows the
ideas of Benedict Anderson as “an imagined community.”
The latter sounds fine until one
recognizes that it “logically” implies that “there can be as many nations in
Russia as there are forms of national self-consciousness” and that the Russian
people is reduced to being “a nation of nations.” But all three views ignore
the most important thing: nations are created by states which have an interest
in homogenizing the population.
European countries for the last several
centuries have shown the way in this regard, Granin says, promoting common
languages, common national symbols, and common histories for all the people
under their control. The states did this
because they needed soldiers who spoke the same language and citizens who
shared the same values.
Russia has been moving in this
direction, he continues; “but neither in pre-revolutionary Russia nor in the
USSR was the process of the formation of a nation completed. And as a result, … the Soviet Union
disintegrated.”
To prevent that from happening to the
Russian Federation, Granin continues, people in Russia must not be afraid to
look truth in the face and “stop using double standards.” Russians may not like
what the governments of Ukraine, Georgia and the Baltic countries are doing to
Russian speakers, but “there is no other way to build ‘a nation.’”
For a political nation to exist, the
state must promote a single language and a single culture, something that
frightens ethnopolitical elites. But the requirements of the Russian state are
more important: these elites must be Russianized and russified in order to form
a common “’Russian identity’” and a common “’civic Russian nation.’”
A common language is only part of
what is needed, there must also be “a high degree of cultural
standardization. That is the only way to
make “one ‘imagined community’ – the civic Russian nation’ – the dominant one.” So far that hasn’t happened despite calls for
it by Vladimir Putin and the main documents on nationality policy of the last
decade.
Instruction in schools in the
non-Russian parts of the Russian Federation must increasingly be in Russian
rather than in the national languages, Granin says; and the histories that
these people learn must not be those based on the idea of Russia as a “prisonhouse”
of peoples but as a common state.
“There never was any ‘friendship of
the peoples’ in the Russian Empire and the USSR. It doesn’t exist now in
present-day Russia.” But the only way to overcome this problem is to promote a
common language, a common history and a common culture rather than allow the
flourishing of a multitude of nations and cultures within the country’s
borders.
Summing up, the Moscow philosopher
says, that “the strategy of forming a civic Russian nation is connected with the
development in Russia of political democracy, the institutions of civil society
and of course an all-national system of education … The educational space of
Russia must be unified” and the amount of Russian language broadcasting and
publishing raised.
“Without these and other [similar]
measures, we will not be able to educate patriots of Russia” or prevent its
disintegration, Granin says. But he does
not consider that precisely such a Russianizing and Russifying agenda is the
force most likely to produce exactly the opposite of what he says Moscow should
be aiming at.
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