Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 22 – Vasily Nikolayev, the founder and moving spirit behind the Estonia-based
Mari language website MariUver, says that the greatest threat to his Finno-Ugric
nation is not the direct attacks on its language by making its study voluntary
but rather the ways in which Moscow works to make the Mari language “unnecessary”
to its speakers.
As
Maris find that they can live their lives without using their national
language, he says, they first give it up and then give up their national
identity and begin to assimilate exactly what the Russian authorities want and
something that presages the approaching death of the language and the nation if
nothing changes soon (idelreal.org/a/29779064.html).
Some of these Russian efforts are
blunt like making the study of Mari voluntary or requiring school-leaving
examinations be taken in Russian. Others are more subtle like higher prices for
Mari language publications than for Russian ones because the latter can take
advantage of higher print runs and more advertising.
But in the end, all too many Maris
conclude that it is just easier to use Russian and go along, not recognizing
that giving up their language is another step to giving up their national
identity and their status as the titular nation of a republic. If this process continues,
there will be no Maris in Mari El.
His MariUnver portal, Nikolayev
says, is intended to slow this process and encourage Maris to recognize the threat
and take action to reverse it. But web
portals cannot turn the tide in the face of all the other weapons the Russians
deploy. And census data show that at the present time, the Russians are winning
and the Maris are not.
Nikolayev’s points apply to other
non-Russians as well. In an article in today’s Caucasus Post, Vlada Kirilllina says that Putin’s decision to make
the study of non-Russian languages of the republics entirely voluntary “emasculates”
the ethnic dimension of the regions (capost.media/special/sobytiya/dobrovolnost_v_izuchenii_rodnogo_yazyka_vykholashchivaet_natsionalnyy_aspekt_iz_regionov).
And that in turn,
she and other ethnic activists in the North Caucasus say, has the ultimate
effect of eliminating the justification for the republics as such and even the
survival of the nations themselves. Ever
more non-Russians recognize this threat, Kirillina suggests; but they are
fighting an unequal battle against a center that wants to make their languages
and them “unnecessary.”
Just how great a threat this is was underscored
yesterday by Ildar Gilmutdinov, the chairman of the Duma’s committee on
nationality affairs. He says that 25 languages in Russia are already “at the
brink of disappearing” and another 25 are approaching that state (nazaccent.ru/content/29282-glava-komiteta-po-delam-nacionalnostej-25.html).
Russian officials typically play
down this threat, saying as Valery Tishkov does that no non-Russian nationality
has disappeared in Russia in the last century or reporting as does the Federal
Agency for Nationality Affairs that over the last 150 years the country has
lost only “14 rare languages,” figures that many scholars would dispute.
Gilnutdinov says that there is
currently “a crisis in the nationality schools.” Many textbooks need to be
written, and for some languages, writing systems need to be developed. “The
regions themselves are not able to cope with these challenges, and in this
case, the federal center must come to their assistance and provide support in
this work.”
Unfortunately, the Putin regime is moving
in exactly the opposite direction, cutting support for most non-Russian
programs and thus doing what it can to make the languages those programs
support “unnecessary” for their speakers, a clear signal to them that as far as
the Kremlin are concerned, they are “unnecessary” too.
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