Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 13 – Ever more
people are adding their voices to the campaign for those whom the Soviets
divided into Adygeys, Kabardins, and Shapsugs to reclaim their common name as
Circassians (Adygs) not only to avoid confusion but because the Circassians are
one nation, whether they live within the current borders of Russia, or not and
must have one name.
The Kavkaz Uzel news agency today surveys six experts about this situation.
Their comments represent the best discussion of these issues in short compass (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/332833/; cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/03/call-for-circassian-subgroups-to.html).
Madina
Khakuasheva, a Circassian philologist, says that the Soviet-imposed divisions
of the language and people are artificial and confusing. There should be no
talk about a separate Kabardin or Adygey literature: there is only a Circassian
(Adyg) one. All that is needed to
correct the situation is “political will.”
Martin
Kochesoko, president of the Khabze organization, says that there should be no
question that “the Circassians are all those who call themselves in their
native language ‘Adygs.’” Dividing them
into Kabardins, Cherkess and Adygeys is “the fruit of Soviet nationality
policy.” On that basis, “all the administrative structures” in the region are
built.
Naima Neflyasheva,
a scholar at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Center for Civilizational and
Regional Research, says that for her, “the construct ‘Adygeys’ is absolutely artificial.”
Adyg, in contrast is very much real: it lives in the consciousness of the people
and in the literature of their native language. Those who oppose using the term
“Adyg” do not have broad support.
Sergey
Arutyunov, head of the sector on the Caucasus at the Moscow Institute of
Ethnology and Anthropology, says that there is a single Adyg people and a
single Adyg land going back centuries and that that term is translated as
Circassian by outsiders.
Valery
Khatazhukov, head of the Kabaardino-Balkar Human Rights Center, says that
regardless of where they live or what they are required to call themselves by
officialdom, Circassians “recognize themselves as a single people.”
And Denis
Sokolov, now a resident scholar at Washington’s CSIS, says that the assertion
of a common ethnonym among the Circassians will not at least immediately
translate into a single Circassian republic in the North Caucasus: Moscow is
opposed and the ethnic mix in the region is too great for that.
But by calling
for people to publicly identify as Circassians, activists are forcing members
of that nation to talk about a new agenda for the national movement and its
relations to the Adygs/Circassians around the world. That is possible now thanks to the Internet
and social media like Facebook and WhatsApp.
“If the Russian
Federation were a nationally oriented state, then projects like the Circassian
movement,” Sokolov says, “could become the moving force for economic and
political modernization, structures on which the state could rely in the
construction of a new nationality policy.”
But today, “’the
Moscow bureaucracy’ has no interest in forming this new nationality policy,”
and so making progress will be difficult. “If one speaks about the medium term,
then the future of any nationality project on the territory of the Russian
Federation is not very bright.”
However, “if one
speaks about the longer term, then it is difficult to imagine any other scenario
than the development of such nationality and regional projects. This is the
skeleton on which could be constructed a genuine federative political system,
entirely different from the criminalized post-impressionism [sic] which we now observe.”
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