Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 26 – The Putin
regime feels justified in intervening on behalf of ethnic Russians in the
former Soviet republics and says its actions, up to and including the dispatch
of troops, are required to defend the human rights of those communities, rights
which it often asserts are under threat.
But let any other country show even
the slightest concerns about its co-ethnics within the current borders of the
Russian Federation, and both Russian commentators and Russian officials go
ballistic denouncing such concerns as completely without merit and representing
a threat to the territorial integrity of the country.
No such expressions of concern are
more offensive to Muscovite sensibilities, especially because in comparison to
many others, they have a solid foundation: There were large and coherent Ukrainian
ethnic communities in many parts of what is now the Russian Federation at the end
of the imperial period.
Called “wedges” (klins in Ukrainian), they took shape at
the end of that period when Ukrainians suffering from drought and rural overpopulation
moved to portions of central Russia, Siberia, and most importantly to the
Russian Far East. In some places,
especially in the Far East, they were the dominant ethnic community.
The Zelyonyi klin or “green wedge” in the Russian Far East was the largest
and most important; and despite Moscow’s efforts at Russification, many people
in that region still feel attached to their Ukrainian roots, retain distinct
Ukrainian cultural signifiers, and even in some cases speak Ukraine.
During the Russian Civil War, they
sought to form their own Ukrainian Far Eastern Republic. In the mid-1980s, the
United States even broadcast to the region in Ukrainian from facilities in
Japan. And over the last decade, there have been period discussions about support
for or at least recognition of the Zelyonyi
klin by Kyiv.
(For background and references to
this region, its history and its Ukrainian past and present, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/06/historical-memory-of-ukrainian-wedge-in.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/03/ukrainians-in-russian-far-east-aging.html
and
Now the issue has heated up thanks
to an interview Poroshenko advisor Oleg Medvedev gave to Ukrains’kiy tizhden last week (tyzhden.ua/Politics/218608). In a discussion of how the Far East might be “Ukrainianized,”
the political scientist noted that “the territory of the Ukrainian language is broadening
and the population there is ready for ‘soft Ukrainianization.’”
Russian officials and pro-Kremlin
commentators were outraged. Anatoly Vasserman,
one of the latter, acknowledged that in in the Far East, “settlers from
southwest Russia had at some point lived and used a dialect similar to
Ukrainian. But he stressed “one must not consider this territory Ukrainian because
people there spoke a Ukrainian dialect” (topcor.ru/2301-ambicii-kieva-doshli-do-dalnego-vostoka.html).
What Vasserman and those who share
his views do not recognize is that they are denying the very principle on which
Moscow operates with regard to ethnic Russians and Russian speakers abroad. At
the very least, discussions about the Zelyonyi klinn are useful in highlighting
that inconsistency.
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