Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 19 – An unchanging
characteristic of Russian life is the tendency to compare any new event to an
earlier one and predict what will happen now on the basis of what happened
then. That is occurring in Yekaterinburg
where an historian says the ones now resemble those of 1905 and that the
authorities will likely respond again with provocations.
Many of those taking part in today’s
demonstrations, Yevgeny Burdenkov of the Museum of the History of Yekaterinburg
says, are already comparing Vladimir Putin’s promise to poll residents about
the construction of the cathedral in the central square with Nicholas II’s
October 1905 manifesto promising a Duma and civic freedoms (ura.news/articles/1036278087).
After the manifesto was proclaimed,
the historian recalls, students went into the square to celebrate. The tsarist
police allowed them to do so, knowing that it was likely that only students
would do so. And then their allies, the black hundreds were turned loose on the
students and many were beaten.
That radicalized rather than calmed
the situation, Burdenkov says, because “provocations are always useful only to
the most radical sides of a conflict.” Those who want a resolution are simply left
out of the calculations of such people.
“If something similar were to occur
now,” he continues, “this would be a catastrophe worse than even in those
years. Then in many respects, the value
of human life was lower and the seriousness of clashes was thus higher.” There
is one respect in which the situation would not be as bad: far fewer
Yekaterinburg residents now have guns than did a century ago.
Another major similarity between
1905 and now, Burdenkov says, is that both actions were spontaneous, reflecting
the views of society rather than the work of a few leaders. But after the people went into the streets, political
leaders then and now sought to exploit the demonstrations for their own
purposes, with greater or less effect.
But the biggest difference between
the two years is that “in October-November 1905 there were in general no forces
in the city which could resist the protesters. In our time, such a situation,
of course, is impossible … [Moreover,] people have become less aggressive – education
in this respect has given us a great deal.”
“City residents now are less subject
to manipulation and to various provocations,” Burdenkov continues. In contrast
to 1905, Yekaterinburg residents today “understand that someone who throws a
bottle at the police is not their supporter but an ordinary provocateur”
working against them.
The difficulty now is that many of
those taking part are young people who do not reflect on what they are doing
besides insisting that they “want what they want” and that many among the
powers that be want discipline rather than agreement. That sets the stage for
more clashes and increases the risk of provocations being tried even if they will
not always work.
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