Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 29 – Many Russian
officials and following them many Russians believe that guilt and
responsibility are the same thing, a mistaken view that allows them to assume
that unless they are obviously personally guilty, they bear no responsibility
and can ignore what is done in their name or on their behalf, Volgograd
historian Ivan Kurilla says.
First of all, “responsibility is not
equal to guilt,” he points out. “Guild lies on immediate participants who give
criminal orders and carry them out. On other people, even those who approve
these actions in the course of some pro-government meetings, there is no guilt”
(rosbalt.ru/posts/2018/05/28/1706415.html).
In addition, Kurilla argues, “guilt
is an objective and external phenomenon: a court can establish it despite the
opposition of the accused.” Moreover, “there is no such thing as ‘collective
guilt’ as the level of participation in crimes among all participants always
varies and the guilty are always a minority of the population.”
But the situation with regard to
responsibility is different. “It cannot
be imposed by an external court.” It is a sense of being part of something
larger regardless of one’s own actions. “If there is a basis for pride in the
Victory over Nazism, the first sputnik or Gagarin, then there is one for
feeling responsible for Katyn or the suppression of the Prague Spring.”
Second, Kurilla says, “to
acknowledge responsibility is not the same thing as ‘to repent.’” “Responsibility
is an internal category: it is impossible to impose it.” And thus when
something is done in the name of the Russian people or state that one does not
want to take responsibility for, one should try to do something to change the
situation.
“The position that ‘we weren’t asked,’ ‘we
didn’t choose them,’ ‘this is the regime and not us simple Russians’ is an
evasion, although at first glance it seems logically true. The mistake here is that
it starts from the impossibility of changing anything by personality activity
or resistance.”
According to Kurilla, “the
acceptance of responsibility is the first step to changing reality. That is,
this is not about ‘repentance;’ it is rather about shame.”
And third, the historian continues, “the
acceptance of responsibility is not the same as ‘smearing’ guilt over the
entire people.” For example, all who were delighted with the annexation of
Crimea even if they were later less now are not guilty by that fact; but they
must recognize that they bear responsibility for it. And that they have to work to change things.
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