Paul Goble
Staunton, June 23 – Below is
summarized the last article Andrey Tuomi, the great Karelian interpreter of his
people’s history and goals, prepared before his death earlier this month. Over
the past two decades, his writings have informed the world about a people Moscow
would prefer it forget but one whose best days, thanks to his efforts like his,
lie ahead.
(For his obituary, see ptzgovorit.ru/news/skonchalsya-laureat-konkursa-soyuza-zhurnalistov-karelii-andrey-tuomi. For some earlier Windows on Eurasia
he was the source for, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/04/in-russian-north-environmental-activism.html, windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/01/karelia-doesnt-want-to-unite-with.html, and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/05/administrative-territorial-changes-at.html.)
June 21st was the
centenary of the first flag of Karelia, a blue field on which are emblazoned the
seven stars of the Great Bear constellation (Otava). It was designed by a Finnish
artist inspired by the runes of the Kalevala, and it flew over the Ukhta
Republic which sought independence from Russia but not union with Finland,
Tuomi begins (region.expert/otava/).
The summer of 1918 was the time “when
the northern White Sea Karels made their first conscious steps to their own
independence and the foundation of their own state, the Ukhta Republic,” Tuomi
writes. But the Karels of the White Sea region had begun to recognize their
distinctiveness long before that.
First of all, it was precisely this
people, the Northern Karels, who preserved almost all the records extant that
were assembled into the great Finnish epic, the Kalevala. That alone, Tuomi says, justifies labelling them
“a special sub-ethnos, different both from the rest of Karelia and from Finland.”
Another factor which set them apart,
he continues, was their complex economic activity which involved them in trade
and travel with Europe. There the White Sea Karels picked up many ideas
including not least of all the idea that as a separate nation they had a right
to a separate state.
They were helped along in this
understanding by the formation in Helsinki of the Karelian Enlightenment
Society which had as its goals promoting a flourish Karel culture and the independence
of the White sea Karel nation. That society opened the first schools in the Ukhta
district.
The tsarist authorities sought to
suppress all these differences and used both secular and religious means to do
so, but they did not succeed in keeping the Karels from pursuing their own
independent future when that became possible after 1917, a goal they had been working
toward for some time and not one that Finland had imposed on them.
In 1918, under the Otava flag, the
Northern Karelian Republic was formed, independent of both Russia and
Finland. Had the Karels wanted to unite
with Finland which had received its independence a year earlier, they might
have had an easier time of it but they would not have been true to themselves,
Tuomi continues.
But from Moscow’s point of view,
that distinction didn’t matter: the center was committed to suppressing any
independence movement when it could – and in 1921 that opportunity arose with regard
to the Ukhta Republic. The Soviets sent 26,400 men against the republic whose
army numbered only about 3,000. The result was a forgone conclusion.
The Soviet force lost more than
2,000 of its soldiers in battle and frozen to death; and 11,000 Karels fled the
Ukhta district to Finland, preferring emigration to life under occupation, an
occupation that became increasingly repressive and murderous during the 1920s
and 1930s, Tuomi recounts.
That occupation and that repression
means that the residents of Ukhta district are constantly suspected of
separatism, that the Karels now form “less than 20 percent” of the population
and not the 36 percent Moscow says, and that they have never been included among
the numerically small peoples of the North who get special benefits.
At the present time, he continues,
there are rumors that the authorities plan do divide up what is now called the Kalevala
district and thereby “remove forever from the memory of the people about the
Ukhta Republic, the dream about freedom and independence, about the right of
each people, even the smallest to decide its own fate independently.”
But despite their attempts, the
Russian officials won’t succeed. The Otava flag returned to mass meetings n
2011 and 2012 and has become the symbol of the Republic movement in Karelia, a
movement which seeks economic and cultural autonomy. Young people especially
have flocked to this flag.
Tragically, those who do so often face
problems: “Today the use of this symbol has again become dangerous – according to
repressive Russian laws of recent years, it may be interpreted as ‘a call to
the violation of the territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.” Still the flag flies because it speaks to the
deepest feelings and inalienable rights of the White Sea Karels.
Andrey Tuomi (1967-2019), R.I.P.
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