Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 23 – Many problems
some Cossacks are now presenting in the North Caucasus, including demands for
the return of territory from Chechnya, are the result of Krasnodar Kray’s
decision in 1995 to treat that group of people not as a social stratum defined
by employment but as an ethos “separate from the Russian people,” Vsevolod
Zolotukhin says.
The scholar at the Moscow Higher
School of Economics tells Artur Priymak of Nezavisimaya
gazeta that this policy has encouraged the Cossacks to think of themselves
as a nation and to view “all the Slavic and non-Muslim population of the Kuban”
as Cossacks rather than ethnic Russians (ng.ru/ng_religii/2018-11-20/10_454_krasnov.html).
Zolotukhin
says this Krasnodar policy, one at odds with Moscow’s, has “two dimensions. The
first is that if the authorities as in tsarist times will decide who is an
indigenous resident and who is someone who himself or his descendants has come
from outside, it is possible that this will lead [within Russia itself] to the
institution of non-citizens as in Estonia and Latvia.”
“And
the second is a reflection of its being next door to the North Caucasus. The authorities
calculate that they must develop a firm regional identity. Otherwise the kray
will become only a frontier region filled with problems like Stavropol where
such an identity has not been formed among the Terek Cossacks.”
There
are at least three reasons why this is important – and why Moscow is trying so hard
to discredit what the Krasnodar Kray officials are doing and the way the
Cossacks are responding by accusing the latter of being atheists and supporters
of anti-Moscow Patriarchate positions and Nazi collaborators.
First
of all, it highlights something Moscow doesn’t want to admit but that is very
real: the Russian “nation” is in fact not a unified whole but rather a
congeries of groups, each of which is trying to find its place in the sun. The
Cossacks are only the most prominent, but they are of course far from the only
one.
Second,
Krasnodar’s actions show that Moscow’s policy in this area has not been
universally applied. Stavropol has fallen in line and insisted that Cossacks are
an ethnic Russian stratum, but Krasnodar has not, concluding that it is better
off to come to an understanding with the Cossacks in order to defend itself and
its interests.
And
third, such regional variations in the treatment of Cossacks not only highlight
the weakness of the Russian state on this question but also mean that Cossack
groups like those in Krasnodar are in a position to cause the central
government real problems by using the media, including the Internet, to demand
territorial changes in their favor.
Just as Priymak admits that the actions
of Cossacks in Krasnodar vis-à-vis Chechnya are the result of developments in
Ingushetia concerning the border accord with Ramzan Kadyrov, so too other
groups within what Moscow views as the Russian “nation” are likely to be
inspired by what the Cossacks of Krasnodar are doing, however much the center
tries to discredit them.
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