Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 17 – “There is
nothing worse than holidays that give rise to discord,” the editors of Nezavisimaya
gazeta say; but Russia today seems committed to having more such holidays
about the past rather than recognizing that national unity will be possible
only if there is a clearly articulated and shared “vision of the future.”
In a lead article today, the editors
of the independent Moscow newspaper say that the efforts to create yet another
such holiday about the past, in this case on November 11 concerning the day
that Russian forces blocked the further expansion of the Mongol hordes, is a
case in point (ng.ru/editorial/2019-11-17/2_7728_red.html).
The idea for this holiday came from
the Kaluga government which hoped to use it to attract attention to itself.
Then, a bill was submitted to the Duma to make this an official all-Russia one;
and as a result, what appears to have started as an attempt at regional
branding became yet another occasion for divisions among the peoples of the
Russian Federation.
There was “an angry reaction” from
several muftiates who dislike the image of the horde that the holiday would
promote, and “after the interventions of Islamic leaders and the political
elite of Tatarstan, the bill was removed from the parliamentary agenda.” But
Kaluga governor Anatoly Artamonov did not give up and suggested, incorrectly,
that Putin supported it.
One of the reasons that some
supported Artamonov’s initiative was that by talking about this stand against
the Mongols, they could promote “a cult of Ivan III” celebrating the unification
of Russia by the state in a less explosive way than focusing on his grandson,
Ivan the Terrible, whose image really is divisive.
But more generally, the editors
continues, “all this showed that the picture of the past that the peoples of
Russia have is very varied and contradictory and that there is in it a
multitude of mythologies and legends” and many occasions for anger when they
are recalled, especially in the form of an official holiday.
Relying on the past to unite Russia
won’t work, Nezavisimaya gazeta says, in an implicit criticism of
Vladimir Putin who has tried to do just that. Instead, it concludes, “such
unity will be achieved not by military mythology” about the past but rather by
the provision of “a common vision of the future.”
Unfortunately, the editors say,
unlike in other countries including China, such a vision for Russia is “not in
sight.” And until it is put in place, “we will again and again live through the
complexes of the past” in an effort to come up with a substitute.
No comments:
Post a Comment