Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 26 – One of the most
interesting if not always the most successful tactics the Soviets employed to
pacify and control Muslim populations within the USSR was to alternatively play
up national traditions to weaken Islam and, more rarely, to support some Muslim
activities to weaken nationalism.
Now, in an updated version of this,
Naima Neflyasheva, a senior specialist on the North Caucasus, is proposing that
Moscow make use of one of the oldest and proudest traditions of Circassian
culture – attachment to horses and equestrian events – as a means for blocking
the radicalization of young people there (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/335716/).
At a time when rapid social change has
broken down many of the traditional links between generations and opened the
way for the radicalization of young people, the senior scholar at the Russian
Academy of Sciences Center for Civilizational and Regional Research says, promoting
equestrian events can restore ties that help prevent such a development.
The Circassian traditions of horse
breeding and riding, Neflyasheva continues, can do a great deal because “they are
attractive for contemporary young people and have a foundation in traditional
culture.” Young people who get involved in horse breeding, riding and
especially well-organized processes of horses simply view their past and
present differently.
Such activities, like the Khase riders program established in 2017,
she says, “can work not only as a mechanism for the preservation, reproduction,
and translation of stable forms of culture but provide a new direction for a
better future and not simply making sense of a legendary past.”
That program involves young people
in taking care of horses and then participating in rides with others through
various places where the horses and riders are celebrated as national heroes.
Young men with that experience, the scholar says, are far less likely to be
tempted by any Islamist message.
“The goal of the Khase is the
revival of the Kabardin breed of horses, the promotion of the etiquette of
horse and rider and the rebirth of traditional crafts connected with
horse-breeding,” Neflyasheva says. Among
its most prominent features are mass horse riding expeditions in which young
men can easily be drawn.
“Why do we consider that such horse
matches can be considered as a practice which has a prophylactic effect on
young people?” she asks rhetorically. Because, she continues, such activities
are not new. Instead, they draw on an old tradition in which the male rider has
always enjoyed prestige.
“The deep psychological interconnection
between horse and rider is shown already in the expression of the Nart epics – ‘whatever
the horse is like so is the man.’ Historical sources are full of testimonials
that even Circassian princes … never looked down on the physical work required
to look after their horses.”
Thus,
promoting the revival of this tradition will give young people something to
hold on to that will allow them to withstand the siren song of the Islamists.
But things must be organized carefully, Neflyasheva says. Otherwise the
celebration of this aspect of national culture could lead to clashes as it did
last September (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/11/land-shortages-in-north-caucasus-make.html).
She is obviously correct that the
promotion and development of Circassian culture would block the spread of
Islamist ideas among the young. But unfortunately, it is all too likely that
many Russian officials are going to view the rise of Circassian national
identity as just as much a threat as the Islamists to their control of the
region.
And if that proves to be the case,
this most useful idea will either be rejected entirely or implemented only in
part and thus reduced in its impact. But the fact that such ideas are now being
discussed shows the Hobson’s choice confronting Moscow in the North Caucasus:
if it doesn’t allow national cultures more room to develop, it will face a new
Islamist challenge.
But if it does allow them to do so
in order to block the spread of radicalization, Moscow will face another
challenge, one that may be just as subversive of Russian control.
No comments:
Post a Comment