Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – Over the last
decade, the Putin regime has insisted on the display of the slogan “Forever
with Russia” in the capitals of the North Caucasus republics, an action that
has not unified the peoples there with the Russian world but “enraged” people there
who would have been less offended by a more honest discussion of the past.
In the latest example of the counter-productive
results of Moscow going too far in denying the past, Moscow’s imposition of the
slogan “Forever with Russia” as a propaganda slogan is infuriating North Caucasians
who point out that it is not only historically inaccurate but logically
impossible.
And their
comments, made to and reported by Radio Svoboda journalist Anzor Tamov, very
much suggest that once again in this restive region, the Kremlin has gone too
far and undermined the very values it says it is trying to promote (kavkazr.com/a/svyashchenno-dlya-predateley/29479823.html).
The slogan has become increasingly a
part of the public architecture of the cities in the region, Tamov says. In
Karachayevo-Cherkessia, a giant banner with this slogan appeared on the
government building in advance of the Day of the Republic on September 7. Many
hoped that it would soon be taken down, but “the experience of neighboring
republics calls that into doubt.”
In Kabardino-Balkaria, for example, the
slogan went up in 2007 on the memorial arch for the commemoration of the 450th
anniversary of “the union of Russia and the Kabardino-Balkar Republic; and
there it has remained. Even earlier the slogan appeared in Soviet times in
Maykop, the capital of the Adygeya Republic.
Nyr Aslan from Cherkessk tells Tamov
that the slogan is both absurd – “who is with anyone else forever?” – and offensive.
Over the centuries, he continues, the Russians “brought us hypocrisy, fratricide,
alcoholism, prostitution, the destruction of 95 percent of our people,
assimilation and an attack on our native language, which is holy for us.”
Moreover, he continues, “over the
course of these 450 years, the Russian-Circassian war lasted 101.” To ignore
that fact, “offends our people and the memory of our ancestors. ‘Forever with
Russia’ are favored and sacred words only for traitors and those without any
backbone.”
His fellow Circassian, Marat
Khamukov shares his view, as does Zaur Zhemkhov of Nalchik, who adds that he doesn’t
like having to look at the slogan because it reminds him that reality was
exactly the reverse of what its words suggest.
“We are a federation and not an
empire,” and consequently, such words are offensive because they come from a
regime that is “conducting a policy of the destruction of the federation and the
assimilation of the non-Russian population,” Khamukov adds.
Azamat Getazhey, another resident of
Kabardino-Balkaria, says that the slogan is simply incorrect. How can one speak
about “the voluntary inclusion of Kabardino-Balkaria into Russia” 450 years
ago? There was no Kabardino-Balkaria at that time.” Instead, what happened was the formation of “a
military-political union of the Kabards and the tsarist empire.”
Zhambot Merov, a Circassian from the
KBR, says that putting the slogan up is “a symbol of the carnival of stupidity”
the peoples of the North Caucasus are now forced to live with. Asserting things
that people know aren’t true about the past or the present only undermines the
authority of those who make them.
And Shamsudin Neguch of the Adygey
Republic says that “the slogan ‘Forever with Russia’ not only offends” his
nation but “as it were ‘puts [the Russians] above us from the start” and underscores
that what is taking place in Russia today is “the degeneration of the country
into an empire.”
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