Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 26 – The Kremlin,
remembering that environmental activism in Estonia in the 1980s contributed to
the rise of the independence movement there, is doing everything it can to
prevent the Shiyes protests against Moscow trash from becoming protests against
Moscow as such, Vadim Shtepa says.
One measure of the imperial center’s
success so far this time around is that participants in the Shiyes protest
encampment have refrained from displaying government-recognized regional flags
and other symbols lest Moscow officials charge them with “separatism,” the regionalist
writer says (severreal.org/a/30227920.html).
In addition to fear of prosecution,
participants in the Shiyes “commune” appear to believe that only by avoiding
the display of such regional symbols can they hope to become an all-Russia movement,
Shtepa continues. But in avoiding tapping into the strength of regional and
local feelings, the demonstrators have sacrificed what could have helped them
win their cause.
A leader of the Shiyes protests from
Arkhangelsk told the regionalist writer that he and others had avoided displaying
the official flag of their oblast because “this would be immediately
interpreted as a manifestation of separatist attitudes,” and it is important
that the demonstrators not give the authorities the opportunity to bring such
charges.
Such concerns are surprising for two
reasons, Shtepa says. On the one hand, people in neighboring non-Russian
republics – Karelia and Komi – show little fear of displaying regional flags.
And on the other, “activists in many ‘Russian’ oblasts and krays also carry
their flags on various occasions.”
“Regional flags are a visible symbol
of the social and cultural consolidation of local residents,” the regionalist writer
continues; “and in normal countries no one sees in them any ‘separatism.’” But
in Russia, the center fears that any display of such flags, even those which
are officially established is a sign of incipient “separatism.”
In the case of the Shiyes
protesters, the Kremlin has an additional reason for its worries: it has been
fighting efforts by Pomors to secure official recognition as a nationality; and
it apparently assumes that the display of a federal subject flag may help power
the growth of national identity among a people it dismisses as “a sub-ethnos of
the Russian nation.”
But those taking part in the Shiyes
protests need to remember the Estonian history as well and get over their fear
of raising their flags. After all, the occasion for their protest is not just
environmentally harmful trash but a political system based in Moscow that wants
to send trash to their lands without their consent.
No comments:
Post a Comment