Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 10 – “The rooting
of Russia in the cultural space of the Far East” in the 17th through
the 19th centuries “was neither colonization nor conquest,” Moscow
ethnographer Vadim Turayev says. Instead, the Russians brought European culture
and ended violent conflicts among the aboriginal populations there.
“This doesn’t mean,” he continues, “that
there weren’t any military actions … There was both force and expansion … But
the essence was not in that. Rather Russia quietly entered into the local
aboriginal life” and over time exerted a powerful influence on the indigenous
population (ria.ru/science/20180208/1514193592.html).
Turayev is describing the
conclusions of a new book prepared by him and his colleagues at the Moscow
Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology which clearly is seeking a middle way
between the two paradigms that have defined how both Russians and Westerners
have viewed Russian expansion to the Pacific.
On the one hand, in the eyes of many
in the West and for brief periods in the Russian capital and longer in many
regions, this expansion has been viewed as a simple form of imperial expansion.
But on the other, for many Russians official and otherwise, the stress has been
laid on what they see as the “voluntary” joining of these peoples to the Russian
state.
If one speaks about the results of
this process, Turyaev says, “we characterize them as cultural colonization,”
which involved among other things “the inclusion of an enormous hitherto
practically unknow historical and cultural cooperation” and “the beginning of
the territorial rapprochement of Europe and East Asia.”
And that rapprochement, he continues,
involved not just the indigenous peoples of the Far East but also the Chinese
and Koreans as well.
Importantly, “with the arrival of
the ethnic Russians in the Far East, inter-clan and inter-ethnic conflicts say
between the Chukchi and the Koryaks, between the Evenks of various groups and
so on ceased. The Russians didn’t allow these conflicts to grow, used force and
suppressed them at the very start.”
“Of course,” Turayev says, the
Russians acted differently in different situations, using both sticks – military
force – and carrots – assistance of various kinds – to end what had in many
cases been long-standing conflicts. They thus introduced European values such
as agriculture and a settled way of life, helped cities appear for the first
time, and introduced Christianity.
As far as methods are concerned, the
Moscow ethnographer concludes, the Russian state behaved very much better with
regard to its indigenous population than did the American one with the Indians
in North America.
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