Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 13 – There are few
subjects that Russian government officials appear more sensitive to than any
suggestion that the people Moscow calls the Great Russian nation are in fact
internally splinted along regional lines, with some of these identities, such
as the Siberian, being as strong or stronger for their followers than the
Russian.
Such attitudes are especially lively
at a time when many in Moscow are still insisting that Russians, Belarusians
and Ukrainians are a single nation, torn apart by the machinations of foreign
powers and that it is Russia’s responsibility to reunite the three into a
single nation and a single state.
And they have intensified of late
not only because of regionalist movements and the activities of the various
Cossack hosts but also by suggestions by Ukraine that there are parts of the
Russian Federation that are not really Russian, Moscow’s claims notwithstanding
(windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/09/window-on-eurasia-ukrainians-in-kyiv.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/05/kuban-might-pursue-independence-but.html).
All this makes an announcement today
about a scholarly plans for an expedition to Krasnodar Kray in July to
investigate what the scholars from the Russian State Humanities University
call, not surprisingly in quotation marks, the “Kuban” identity of the
population there (nazaccent.ru/content/24359-uchenye-otpravyatsya-v-ekspediciyu-dlya-issledovaniya.html).
According to the organizers of this
expedition, “Krasnodar Kray is interesting as a multi-cultural region whose
uniqueness is defined by the significant presence in the region of the Cossacks”
and that this has led to “the formation of a special ‘Kuban’ identity” that
embraces not only those typically called Russians but also Assyrians, Poles,
and Germans.”
(For a discussion on the general
issue of regional identities within Russia and the fears Moscow has about them,
see the current author’s “Regionalism – the Nationalism of the Next Russian
Revolution” (in Russian) at afterempire.info/2016/12/28/regionalism/.)
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