Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 31 – In the 1920s
and 1930s, the Soviet state supported or even created a whole number of non-Russian
nations but did little or nothing to develop the Russian nation, viewing it as
a threat. Now, the Kremlin has reversed course, promoting nation building among
Russians but not among non-Russians, Simon Kordonsky says.
The former Putin advisor and now Higher
School of Economics sociologist says the Kremlin’s efforts to boost the Russian
nation have not worked out very well because of both the collapse of the kind
of monitoring needed and the poor design of its nation-building plans (dailystorm.ru/obschestvo/russkiy-nacionalizm-proekt-surkova-dlya-splocheniya-intelligencii).
In an interview he gave to the Daily
Storm’s Mariya Nemtseva, Kordonsky says many non-Russians who did not live
within the territory of the national-territorial units bearing their name reidentified
or were reidentified as Russian, reducing the integral quality of that national
identity.
Because of that, he continues, there
were many attempts to form up the ethnic Russians as “a special ethnos” and to
use Russian nationalism as a means of doing so. But after 1991, these attempts
have generally failed in large measure because the necessary monitoring of all
ethnic groups collapsed in the early 1990s.
In Soviet times, Kordonsky says, the
government maintained a system to monitor religions and “in the KGB there were
corresponding structures which carefully tracked nationalist movements.
Somewhere about 1994, these functions disappeared.” And they haven’t been
replaced.
“Now, the enormous ethnic and
sectarian activity is practically unmonitored, except perhaps for those sects
which are defined as totalitarian. The authorities apparently simply don’t know
hos to go about the process of establishing a new ethnicity,” in this case,
that of the Russians.
Putin’s aide Vladislav Surkov has
made numerous attempts in this direction in the hopes of “unifying the intelligentsia
in opposition to a mythical Russian fascism.” Those efforts have failed, the projects
of one kind or another including putting stars in the Duma and supporting Navalny
have been cancelled, and the money to them has stopped flowing.
Nonetheless, ever new projects
continue to be proposed, Kordonsky says, at least in part because “the
authorities very much fear revolts,” especially ones that unite various groups
in various regions at one and the same time as happened in the 1990s. The
powers that be know they can deal with isolated protests but fear that they
couldn’t to combined ones.
Moscow lacks the statistics it needs
to do its work, a sharp contrast to the situation in Soviet times when the
authorities were obsessed with statistics and ensuring that they reflected the communist
ideology. Today, “the census in Russia is
an instrument of administration” rather than an enumeration of the population.
That opens the way for manipulation
of both the total population and the size of the population of particular
administrative units. And such manipulation
in turn feeds the manipulation of elections and of the distribution of resources
from the center. But it means that the center can’t be sure that what it is
doing reflects reality.
“The USSR was a profoundly
statistical state,” he continues. “The census gave a precise measure of the
relationship among various social groups. The authorities tried that the
relationship between the number of workers, peasants and employees as among that
oof socialist nations was approximately equal in all social places.”
This meant that members of these groups
were allocated slots in legislatures and institutions in correspondence with
their numbers in the population. But now
there is no agreed-upon basis for allocating slots and there is no accounting
that would allow for such an allocation if there were.
“Surkov tried to reproduce the Soviet
model and began to send into the Duma artists and sportsmen,” Kordonsky says.
But this didn’t work “because of the lack of a clear social structure” defined
by the powers that be. The same thing
has happened and even more clearly with the representation of ethnic groups.
In the course of this interview, the
sociologist and former Kremlin aide makes two additional points: First, he says
that Putin has “a photographic memory” which is “striking.” And second, he says
that the quality of education in Russia has declined mightily over the last
decade or so.
When he joined the Higher School of
Economics in 2006, “the students were children whose parents had received a
Soviet education. Then in their place came children whose parents had unlearned
much in post-Soviet times. Education for such students is a means of obtaining
social status rather than knowledge.”
“With each passing year,” Kordonsky
says with obvious regret, “there remain ever fewer people who are ready to get
involved in any activity except that directed toward obtaining social status.”
No comments:
Post a Comment