Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 21 – Ilya Lazarenko,
one of the organizers of the Zalesskaya Rus regionalist movement, says that he
and his fellow supporters of central Russian regionalism view “the Great
Russian Nation” as the antithesis of the Kremlin’s “Russian World” in that they
consider both Ukraine and Belarus separate countries.
Indeed, he says,
when the Zalesskaya Rus regionalists first organized in 2008, many of them
wanted to name their group Velikorossiya because
they see that term better corresponding to the regional interests of the people
of central Russia or more precisely of the city of Moscow and Moscow Oblast (afterempire.info/2018/05/19/lazarenko/).
Their hopes for developing a serious
regionalist movement, however, “stalled” because “the theme of regionalism in ‘central’
Russia does not work especially well, precisely because of the total
centralization” of the country. It can
only “be formed by the process of exclusion” with the emergence of serious
regionalist movements in Siberia, the Urals, and the Volga region.
Asked why the central Russian
regionalists could not play a role in the demise of the Russian Federation much
like that of the RSFSR in the coming apart of the USSR, Lazarenko says that “the
analogy is not completely correct because the RSFSR all the same was
institutionalized as one of the sovereign republics of the USSR.”
“Zalessiya,” he says, “doesn’t have
anything similar. Karelia and Tatarstan do but ‘central’ Russia doesn’t.”
Moscow City and Moscow Oblast do exist, however, and “therefore in the existing
situation, [he] considers much more realistic the project of a Moscow Republic
via the unification of the city and the oblast.”
Lazarenko argues that “Zalessiya
remains more a cultural political project, but Great Russia [Velikorossiya] could become a political
one.”
Velikorossiya,
he says, is not part of the three in one national project of the 19th
century that embraced Russia, Little Russia and White Russia, one those who
support the Russian world still embrace. Instead, Velikorossiya “stresses the Great Russian ethnic element and this
means that we elate to Ukraine and Belarus as different and completely
independent states.”
But at the same time, the central
Russian regionalists have no interest in including within their future state
non-Russian areas like Karelia or Tatarstan. Instead, for its supporters, “the
borders of Velikorossiya are intended
to be approximately those of Zalessiya,” an area not significantly larger than the
Central Federal District.
Other regions within the current
Russian Federation where ethnic Russians predominate, Lazarenko continues, will
be outside its borders as well, because in them “will arise other identities,
Volga, Ural, Siberian,” and so on. Velikorossiya will arise in the area between
the Oka and the Volga, the historical Zalessiya” with its own “contemporary
identity.”
Its identity will include many
aspects of the Great Russian ethnos, the central regionalist continues. “This
factor must not be ignored – otherwise, once again will win out ‘a multi-national
empire.” Instead, it will be Russian great not by size but by purpose. “We’ll
do away with the empire but ‘the greatness’ will remain.”
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