Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 7 – Seventy-one percent of the residents of Tatarstan say the
republic should be bilingual, a figure that means almost half of that federal
subject’s ethnic Russians favor that outcome given that 53 percent of the
population are Tatars and 39 percent are ethnic Russians.
That
poll result was presented by Liliya Nizamova, a sociologist at Kazan Federal
University at a conference on “The Positive Experience of Studying and
Regulating Ethno-Social and Ethno-Cultural Processes in Regions of the Russian
Federation” (azatliq.org/a/29476689.html in
Tatar and idelreal.org/a/29477115.html in Russian).
She asked 1990 people “how should
the language situation in Tatarstan develop?” Nineteen percent responded that
Russian should be the language “in all spheres” of life, while 4.5 percent said
that the language should be Tatar. But 71 percent said bilingualism should be
the basis for Tatarstan’s development.
Nizamova also asked over the past
summer “Do you consider that pupils should have the chance to take the state educational
exam in their native language?” Just over half of the sample – 52 percent – said
yes, 28.4 percent said no, and 19.5 percent found it difficult to give any
answer.
Taken together,
these numbers suggest that in Tatarstan at least, there is far less support among
ethnic Russians for Russian as opposed to other languages than many in Moscow
have been suggesting and far more tolerance for the development of various
language communities. To the extent that is true, such attitudes may slow
Vladimir Putin’s Russianization drive.
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