Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 21 – The decision by
Kazakhstan’s new president, as confirmed by that country’s parliament, to
rename the capital Astana and the major streets in all the cities and towns across
Kazakhstan after Nursultan Nazarbayev, has sparked opposition and derision in
that country and dismissive laughter elsewhere.
A petition against this program is
already circulating (fergana.agency/news/106044/);
and in an indication that the Kazakh authorities will tolerate no opposition on
this point, some 20 people have already been arrested (spektr.press/news/2019/03/21/v-astane-zaderzhali-20-protivnikov-pereimenovaniya-goroda-v-nursultan/).
More serious than this open
opposition, however, Kazakhs are making fun of this latest move, one that
highlights the absurdity of renaming so many places for the same person. One blogger, for example, says if this
happens, he will have been born in Nazarbayev, studied in Nazarbayev and worked
in Nazabayev, three different places with the same name.
Others say the government’s policy
will make it impossible to give directions. If you have to go from one
Nazarbayev to another, how will you know which is which? This will undermine the plans of the programs
authors (mk.ru/social/2019/03/20/memy-o-pereimenovanii-astany-v-nursultan-zapolonili-socseti.html
and business-gazeta.ru/article/417644).
Russian officials and mainstream
media have treated this Kazakhstan move with respect (regnum.ru/news/polit/2595754.html),
but some Russian commentators have not, instead viewing what the Kazakhstan
government is doing as a model for their own country and thus making fun of the
entire process.
Anton Orekh, for example, says that what
is happening in Kazakhstan can be a real model for Putin’s Russia. Perhaps the
government can rename Moscow Putin? Or rename Petersburg Putin? But he suggests that the best option is to
rename Vladimir Vladimir (or perhaps Vladimir Vladimirovich) in his honor (echo.msk.ru/programs/repl/2392403-echo/).
To put this renaming drive in
Kazakhstan in perspective, three things need to be remembered. First, what can
be renamed once can be renamed again. One can easily imagine that some future
Kazakhstan leader will move to restore older names precisely to show his
departure from Nazarbayev’s approach.
Second, naming cities and streets
for someone is no guarantee that the policies of that individual will continue.
Stalin took the lead in renaming Petersburg Leningrad but then proceeded to
move in a very different direction and even to liquidate most of Lenin’s
closest comrades in arms.
And third, and perhaps most
important, officials can change names on the map far more easily than they can
change names in peoples’ heads. As every native New Yorker knows, the street
between Fifth Avenue and Seventh Avenue is Sixth Avenue, not Nelson Rockefeller’s
Avenue of the Americas. Only newcomers and visitors think otherwise.
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