Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 13 – In a bid to
shore up his position, Aleksey Tsydenov, the embattled Russian-speaking Buryat
head of the Republic of Buryatia, has promised to learn Buryat by the end of his
first term, an indication that ethnicity without language may not be sufficient
for the leader of a non-Russian republic (baikal-daily.ru/news/19/377591).
In recent years, Vladimir Putin has
increasingly appointed as heads of the republics people who have made most of their
careers outside of those federal subjects even if they are, like Tsydenov,
members of the titular nationality. Most speak the language of that nationality
even if they mostly use Russian. Tsydenov does not.
What makes Tsydenov’s promise
especially intriguing is that it comes at a time when the Kremlin is promoting
the use of Russian and undermining the use of non-Russian languages. For a
republic head to confess he doesn’t know the language of his republic but feels
compelled to learn it says more about how people there actually feel than
almost anything else.
It is an especially telling
concession coming from Tsydenov. Two years ago after being appointed head of
the republic, he explained that his father was a Buryat, his bother an ethnic
Russian, and he therefore of mixed nationality, admitting then that he had
forgotten what little Buryat he knew (baikal-daily.ru/news/19/234617/).
His wife said that the time that he
had to learn the national language because “it is shameful to forget one’s native
language.” But several months later,
pleading that he had too much work to do, Tsydenov conceded that he had not
been able to spend any time learning Buryat (baikal-daily.ru/news/19/278099/).
Apparently, the mass protests which
have taken place in his republic since the September elections have changed his
mind. (On the protests in Buryatia this fall, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/10/protests-in-three-non-russian-republics.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/11/conflict-between-russias-chief-buddhist.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/10/buryat-conflict-really-between-those.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/09/harsh-suppression-of-buryat-protests.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/09/five-reasons-for-protests-in-buryatia.html.
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