Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 16 – To defend
their rights and to overcome the problems that Moscow’s imposed arrangements
have caused, the peoples of the North Caucasus whose regional identity has
always been stronger than ethnic or religious ones need to again seek to form a
Mountaineers Confederation, Sofiya Kodzova says.
Kodzova, an ethnic Kabard (Circassian)
who heads the St. Petersburg Olma Media Group,
makes that argument in the course of a presentation to the Liberal Mission
Foundation discussion of how to protect ethnic rights and democratic rights
simultaneously (liberal.ru/articles/7441).
She says that today, just like 400
years ago, liberal doctrines by themselves “are not capable of defending a
small individual against the state, a small country against a large one (and
one is speaking not only about Ukraine and Crimea) or a small people from a dominating
nation (or more precisely from the state acting in its name).”
“Chechnya-Ichkeria, entering into a
war with Russia is a very clear example of a conflict in which a small
ethno-formation against a monster state is condemned in advance;” and more than
that, of the ways in which the monster state will transform the small ethnic
formation into an even worse variant of itself.
But this does not mean,” Kodzova
says, that “small peoples for a more comfortable and prospective existence must
reject the search for new ethno-cultural constructions or alternatively search
for an alternative to present-day ‘liberal-great power scholasticism.’” And the unexpected triumph of a song, “Salam
Aleikum, Brothers,” in the North Caucasus proves that.
“The secret of this musical sensation of
course is not in the music or the dance but in the political message
practically all mountaineers took from it,” she continues. And this message is “purely
regionalist, confederalist, and if one may say so also both anti-imperialist
and anti-nationalist.”
“It is clear that under the words ‘my
proud region and motherland’ is meant precisely the Caucasus region and more
precisely the mountainous part of the Caucasus and not Russia … There is not a
word about Russia in the song, and the flag of the Russian Federation in this
flash mob also doesn’t figure.”
It reflects the intensifying feeling
among the mountaineers of the North Caucasus that they have more in common than
the ethnic divisions the Soviets and the Russians have tried to promote and
that they have less in common with the rest of the Russian Federation than they
had thought but cannot fight it individually.
As some North Caucasians told a
Moscow commentator not long ago, “’if you begin to fight NATO, we will not be
fighting on your side’” (echo.msk.ru/programs/year2019/2517065-echo/).
“It is no secret,” Kodzova says, that
the North Caucasus has its own “’face’” both among its residents and for
Russians who seldom distinguish among the groups Moscow has sought to keep
separate. And it is also no secret that for people in the region, “a common
mountaineer identity in the Caucasus has always stood above religious
commonality and ethnic markers.”
Many of the problems in the North
Caucasus were created by Soviet efforts to create ethnic republics and draw
borders among them. Indeed, there have been border disputes, often violent, since
the beginning; and it is clear now that these conflicts “will never be resolved
by means in the Russian imperial toolbox.”
Only a regionally based
supra-national formation can solve these problems without the kind of
repression that kept them in check in Stalin’s times. And it is “not surprising” that North
Caucasians have periodically thought about and even attempted to create such a
unity in diversity, Kodzova continues.
“The mountaineers made the first
kind of conscious choice of this kind in 1917,” she says. Between the two revolution,
there was born in the region, “the idea of a Caucasus Confederation and a year
later without clashes or bloodshed was formed ‘a Union of the United Mountaineers
of the North Caucasus and Daghestan.’”
It lasted only a couple of years before
Moscow’s intervention destroyed it, but it included “all the territory from the
Black to the Caspian Sea,” some 260,000 square kilometers with a population of
more than six million people. Within it were “Daghestan, Chechnya, Ossetia,
Kabarda, Balkaria, Karachay and Abkhazia.”
Its internal borders for these
national formations “had an undoubted logic and were based on ethnicity but in
the case of any territorial or other contradictions, there was the possibility
of their exclusively peaceful and consensual resolution.”
This idea about a confederation was
discussed and promoted in 1990 by Abdurakhman Avtorkhanov, the great Sovietologist,
who recommended it “as the best model of regional arrangements based on democratic
principles.” But efforts to realize it were suppressed bcasue Moscow saw it as
a manifestation of separatism.
But now 30 years have passed, 30
years filled with two Russian wars against Chechnya and with conflicts within
and among the nations and republics of the region that Moscow has encouraged and
the people of the region are again thinking about a confederation. That is
shown by the popularity of the hit song, “Salam Aleikum, Brothers.”
There is growing recognition that if
such a confederation were established, it would be in a position to eliminate the
disputes about borders that now ark the regions, to allow for the return of
refugees, and to overcome the disputes that Moscow relies on. In short, it is
rapidly becoming an idea whose time has come again.
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