Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 19 – Like many regions of the Russian Federation, Karelia is today a
colony of Moscow, but one must not analyze it according to narrow ethnic categories
because it is a mistake to imagine that “’all Karels are for independence but
all ethnic Russians are for empire,’” Vadim Shtepa says.
The
reality is much more complex, he tells Ukraine’s Sichovyk, a product of “a centuries-long Slavic-Finnic symbiosis”
in which “Karelian villages coexist with North Russian ones, and there have never
been conflicts on a nationality basis” (sichovyk.com.ua/svitovid/1171-vadim-shtepa-interview-about-free-karelia in Ukrainian; afterempire.info/2018/11/19/sichovyk/
in Russian).
“In local dialects are mixed
Karelian and Russian words; people write poems in them and local folk groups
use them in songs. Imperial Russificaiton of course has been carried out for centuries
but its victims have been not only the Karels and the Wepsy but also the Pomors
and Trans-Onegins, the descendants of residents of the Novgorod Republic.”
Indeed, in some ways, the local
Russians are oppressed more than the others: they are forced to study Moscow
Russian in schools whereas the non-Russians have at least limited opportunities
to study their own national languages which no one in Moscow understands or
considers important.
Today, despite all the oppression of
ethnic groups, Shtepa continues, “the main division of residents of Karelia
goes not along the lines of ethnic origins but rather along those of political
views.” There are many Russians who want the republic to control its own resources
and destiny and become part of Europe, as there are many self-proclaims Karels
who are pure “Stalinists.”
There are few outlets now for national
or regional views, but one can say that these “combine politics, economics and
culture. In politics we call for the free election of the regional authorities;
in economics, for taxes collected in the republic to remain there and not be
sent to Moscow; and in culture, for the preservation and development of the
unique Karelian identity.”
When the empire weakens and then
dies as is both necessary and inevitable, the regionalist who now lives in
Estonia and edits the After Empire
portal says, this regional identity will be stronger than any ethnic one in
Karelia – and that will pose a greater obstacle to Moscow’s efforts to restore
the empire than just about anything else.
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