Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 22 – Vladimir Putin may rue the day he called for making the study of
non-Russian languages voluntary while keeping the study of Russian obligatory if
non-Russians take up an idea now circulating in Sakha to mobilize parents to
register their children in non-Russian classes and force Moscow to pay for
them.
According
to Sakha educator Natalya Sitnikova, “if parents display their patriotism and select
for their children the study of native languages, then the state will support
their creation” and that will mean that “the positions of native languages will
only be strengthened” now that “free choice has been established in law” (regnum.ru/news/society/2468553.html).
The Putin language law specifies
that “federal state educational standards guarantee the possibility of
receiving education in native languages from among the languages of the peoples
of the Russian Federation,” she continues. In the past, this was only a rule
issued by the Russian education ministry which could be changed. Now, it is a
matter of law.
That means it can’t be changed
without action by the Duma. Consequently,
Sitnikova says, “parents and the legal representatives of children must write
declarations about the choice of this or that language of instruction and what
native language from among the languages of the Russian Federation they would
like to study on entering school.
What this means, she continues, is
that “now much depends on parents and whether they will choose their native language
for study. In this case, the parents must display their patriotism” because “this
is a big responsibility before their people for the preservation of their
native language.”
Fedot Tumusov, a Duma deputy from
Sakha, earlier suggested that non-Russians shouldn’t be upset by the new law
because they will be able to “’render it harmless.’” What
Sitnikova says is an indication of how some non-Russians plan to do just that, encouraging
other non-Russians to take a stand and demand that their children study
non-Russian languages.
If that notion takes off, it would
mean that non-Russians would mobilize to demand that the state live up to its
own law and provide schools and educational materials in their native
languages, something Putin and those around him aren’t likely to be willing to
do. But now in contrast to the past, the
non-Russians have the law on their side and can use it.
Indeed, this is a classic example of
the principle that if you are given lemons, make lemonade. But if the non-Russians do mobilize in this
way, that “lemonade” will be bitter for Putin either because non-Russians will
have a new basis for coming together or because they will now see that the
Kremlin has no plans to live according to its own laws.
Either outcome will leave the
non-Russians far more mobilized than they would have been if no such law had
been proposed or adopted.
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