Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 14 – The Euromonitor
group, using UN and national data sets, reports that the number of people using
Russian in the post-Soviet states has declined by ten percent or more since
1994, a decline that reflects the re-orientation of these nations away from
Moscow and puts paid to Vladimir Putin’s efforts to base his “Russian world” on
the Russian language.
In Kazahstan in 1994, 33.7 percent
of residents spoke Russian; as of last year, only 20.7 percent do. In Latvia
and Estonia, the corresponding figures are 40.5 percent to 29.8 percent and
from 33.3 percent to 23.4 percent (sobkorr.ru/news/58F096BE6E403.html
and kommersant.ru/doc/3270367).
Some
of this reflects the declining share of the ethnic Russian populations there as
a result of out-migration and dying out of aging groups as well as the higher
birthrates and lower death rates among the titular non-Russian nations. But
much of this reflects a desire to participate in the broader world, English- or
Chinese-speaking, directly rather than via Russian.
It
is still true that older members of the elites speak Russian. After all, those
over 50 grew up and were educated in a Russian-dominated environment. But younger
people – and they are entering and will soon dominate the elites now – speak much
less Russian even than the national figures suggest.
On
the one hand, Moscow must come to terms with what other former imperial centers
have: Some in its former colonies will continue to look to it and its language.
But over time, ever fewer will, preferring instead to use their national language
or to learn international languages that are more useful to them than Russian.
And
on the other, Western countries which interact with these countries are
increasingly going to have to devote the resources to provide training in these
non-Russian languages for diplomats and businessmen rather than continuing to
assume, as many still do, that they can “get by” with Russian.
That
may be true in some places and for a while yet.
But it is rapidly ceasing to be the case.
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