Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 14 – Most of those
influenced by Samuel Huntington’s ideas about “the clash of civilizations” have
focused on the confrontation between the Christian West and the world of Islam.
A smaller number have focused on the conflict between the Orthodox world of
eastern Europe and the Catholic-Protestant west of Europe.
But perhaps the most important clash
of civilizations is in evidence on the territory of the former Soviet space
between those who seek to root out the legacy of Soviet communist oppression
and those who celebrate it or even go further and seek to re-impose it on their
own countries and others as well.
That clash has been very much in
evidence in Ukraine and Russia this month. On Friday, the Ukrainian authorities
took down the last statue of Lenin in Kyiv even as the Russian ones continued,
as part of their Victory Day commemorations, have continued to celebrate Stalin
and his brutal dictatorship as models for emulation.
In a commentary for Radio Liberty’s
Ukrainian Service, Vitaly Portnikov argues that this civilizational divide is “more
defining than Ukrainian hopes for European integration and the Russian chimera
of a Eurasian Union” (radiosvoboda.org/a/28483765.html;
in Russian at charter97.org/ru/news/2017/5/13/249748/).
He points out that “the final
disappearance of the Bolshevik leader from the pedestal coincided with the
decision of the European Council on the final offering to Ukraine of a
visa-free regime with the EU.” For him, the Ukrainian commentator says, “this
is not simply a coincidence” but a sign of a broader civilizational shift.
But while in Ukraine, “the very
memory of Lenin is disappearing,” Portnikov continues, “in Russia memories of
Stalin are being revived. Precisely about Stalin and not about Lenin” because
for the Putin regime, “after the unmasking of the Stalin cult of personality,
Lenin was the symbol of ‘a good communist.’”
From all available evidence, he
says, “the present-day rulers of Russia cannot agree with this image of the humanist
leader because the real Lenin was never a humanist. They need Stalin because
Stalin was an all-powerful ruler and someone that led the entire world to fear
Russia. Putin wants that both his own
and outsiders fear him.”
Despite the historical record of
Stalin’s crimes, Putin’s promotion of a cult of the late Soviet dictator has
become ever more hyperbolic with each passing year, Portnikov says, and “every
Victory Day is becoming a step toward the return of Stalin to the pedestal and
to the rebirth of total Chekist power and the fear of the world toward Russia’s
unpredictability.”
“The civilizational divorce of
Ukraine and Russia,” Portnikov argues, “to a large extent is driven not by the
fact that one country is striving to become part of present-day Europe while
the other is returning to medieval Asiatic values and practices. Instead, it is
drive by the fact that Ukrainians have turned away from Lenin while Russians
are returning to Stalin.”
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