Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – Between 1989 and
2002, the overall Russian population fell by 16 percent, but the number of people
who were members of recognized numerically small (under 50,000 each) peoples
rose by 17 percent, not because of any demographic advantage but because Moscow
policies gave real advantages to those who identified as such.
The level of self-consciousness
among these people rose; and those who had identified as part of larger nations
shifted to identify with their historical roots in order to gain government
support as long as they agreed to retain their traditional ways of life (versia.ru/gosudarstvo-ne-znaet-chto-delat-s-korennymi-narodami-severa-a-sami-narody-xotyat-bolshe-deneg).
At the end of Soviet times, there
were 26 such peoples; now there are 46, most of whom had earlier been part of
larger communities like the Sakha, the Komi or the Altai. And unlike in Soviet
times when the authorities promoted the modernization of these peoples, the post-Soviet
Russian government has promoted traditional ways of life like reindeer herding.
To support these peoples, Moscow must
spend 3.5 times more on each of the members of these groups than it does on
Russian elsewhere but typically extends these larger subsidies to members of
the surrounding communities, including on occasion, ethnic Russians. Moreover,
oil and gas firms are often forced to provide assistance as well.
Versiya
journalist Aleksey Privalov says that the situation is not without its
problems. On the one hand, because the Russian law governing these subsidies
seeks to promote nomadic ways of life, those who have shifted to sedentary
lifestyles often get less help than they need from the government.
And on the other, this focus on
keeping these peoples in a way of life that is ill-adapted to the 21st
century not only leads many to try to escape these arrangements but also to the
kinds of corruption that offend others. For example, some “nomads” take money
from the government to buy expensive cars, including in at least one case a
Porsche.
Another set of problems involves schooling.
Moscow has promoted mobile schools in place of the residential facilities the
Soviets imposed. But it has trouble keeping them staffed with teachers, providing
them with necessary equipment, or even keeping students in them, as local
officials often see little use for any education beyond the most rudimentary.
Thus, young members of these
nationalities are allowed, even encouraged to drop out of the schools by local
officials and thus lack any possibility of acquiring new and more promising
jobs. If they don’t continue to work as nomadic herders – and there are fewer
and fewer of them – they become a serious burden on society.
Not surprisingly, many Russians see
the enormous sums spent on these small communities as money that could be more
usefully spent on others; but the problems Moscow now faces, while not unique
to Russia in dealing with numerically small peoples of the north, are compounded
by Moscow’s insistence on manipulating officialized ethnic identities.
Indeed, in addition to the unintended
consequences of smaller groups emerging out of larger ones that Privalov points
to in this article, there is the more general Russian effort to weaken larger
nations by having smaller people broken out from them officially such as has
happened with the Kryashens among the Tatars.
But what makes the case of the numerically
small peoples of more general importance is that their situation is the clearest
case where ethnic identities approved by the state are breaking down and
reconstituting themselves, a reminder that such identities are not eternal but
rather fluid and that the Russian state’s attempt to freeze them is ultimately
doomed to failure.
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