Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 15 – Arguing that republics
in the Russian Federation are only “conditionally” non-Russian and that the
Kremlin is finally prepared to challenge ethnocratic elites on this point,
Russian nationalist Yegor Kholmogorov says that ethnic Russians and other
Russian speakers must have the right to refuse to study non-Russian languages.
Although Vladimir Putin did not go
that far in his recent speech in Yoshkar-Ola, the Kremlin leader’s words have
legitimated Russian nationalist demands for a wholesale attack on the status of
non-Russian languages and non-Russian republics; and Kholmogorov’s words are
the clearest indication of that to date (kp.ru/daily/26718/3744008/).
In an interview with Yelena
Krivyakina of Komsomolskaya Pravda, he
welcomes the fact that the country’s leadership is finally willing to take on
non-Russian elites given that for so many years, “our powers have tried not to
anger the elites of the national republics.”
Now, however, they are ready to do just that.
According to him, any reduction in
Russian language instruction, something often required in non-Russian areas, to
allow for instruction in the titular languages there, is a violation of the law
and the Russian constitution and Russian law, even though it is nowhere written
that a citizen of Russia must know the state langage.
“At the same time,” Kholmogorov
continues, non-Russian elites point to Article 68 of the Constitution which
specifies that the republics have the right to establish their own state
languages. But neither there nor anywhere else is it said that it is a
requirement that everyone who lives on those territories must study them.
Russian-speaking children must not
be required to learn any of these languages, although non-Russians must know
Russian, the state language of the country, according to the Russian
nationalist commentator.
But Kholmogorov’s agenda is far
larger than linguistic. He argues that “our
republics are only conditionally national,” that is, many have a higher
percentage of Russians or at least Russian speakers than they do speakers of the
titular languages. That should be
reflected in state language policy and in the way Moscow deals with these “republics.”
Ethnic Russians and non-Russians
must both study the same number of hours of Russian. If the non-Russians want
to study their language, that should come out of the number of hours devoted to
other subjects. Perhaps, Kholmogorov says, Russians could use a similar amount
of time to study Old Church Slavonic.
Krivyakina points out that Rafael
Khakimov, the vice president of the Academy of Sciences of Tatarstan, recently
observed that “if national languages aren’t taught in schools, this will
threaten the liquidation of the republics and they will then be no different
than oblasts,” to which Kholmogorov responds that this is all right with him.
“Are oblasts worse than republics?”
he asks rhetorically. “Or residents of oblasts second class citizens? All this
policy of artificially imposing national languages is based on the presumption
that Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Tyva, Sakha and other republics are separate
countries.”
And that in turn reflects ancient
history: “A century ago, the Bolsheviks paid for the support [of the non-Russians]
against the Whites by offering broad autonomous in completely arbitrary borders.
And we are paying for this up to now.” Kholmogorov’s implication is that Moscow
should stop doing so.
Komsomolskaya Pravda appends to the interview
a comment by Margarita Rusetskaya, the rector of the Pushkin Institute of the
Russian Language. She says that research her colleagues have done shows that in
many non-Russian areas, only five or six percent of Russian language instructors
really know the language.
“The problem,” she continues, “is
that in many non-Russian republics, Russia is taught by people who are not
native speakers.” And she adds that “any reduction in the number of hours of
Russian language instruction is “simply impermissible … If we want a child to
be integrated in all spheres of life on the entire territory of the country, he
must speak Russian fluently.”
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