Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 21 – Russian nationalists
of almost all stripes have taken as their touchstone Count Sergey Uvarov’s
classical trinity, “Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and People.” But now Vladimir Putin
has defined the unity of Russian nationality in a new way, one that drops the
third element and leaves Russia as “Orthodoxy plus State Power.”
Speaking in Russian-occupied Crimea
on Friday, the Kremlin leader argued that Russians now sould make Khersones “a
Russian ‘mecca,’” because it was there, in his view, that “the strengthening of
the centralized Russian state began,” even though there had been other Russian state
projects elsewhere such as Novgorod (kremlin.ru/events/president/news/55365).
“Here is the ideological basis for
the unification of the Slavic tribes into a single Rusisan nation and the
strengthening of a single national Russian state on the basis of several
components, including a common market, a common language, a common faith, and
the power of the prince.”
According to Putin, “these are the
four main components which led generally speaking to the establishment of a
relatively contemporary by the measures of the times of a contemporary unified
national Russian state and the establishment in its essential featues of the
Russian nation as such.”
Many commentators
have pointed out just how historically inaccurate Putin’s words about Khersones
are – see, for example, Andrey Kurayev’s remarks at rosbalt.ru/posts/2017/08/21/1639964.html
-- but Russian analyst Andrey Illarionov makes an important point about what Putin’s
words say about his understanding of Russia and its nation.
“The Putin ideological formula of ‘a
single national Russian state’ looks like a common faith and the power of the
prince, that is, ‘Orthodoxy plus Autocracy.’”
The third element of Uvarov’s trinity – the people – is for the current
Kremlin leader “completely superfluous” and thus has been dropped (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5999C0004A233).
Such a statist approach precludes
the development of modern nationalism among Russians and means either that they
will break out of Putin’s ideological straightjacket or find themselves stunted
for yet another century or more while other nations based precisely on the
people rather than the state or religion alone will be able to move
forward.
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