Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 22 – Many
Russians are accustomed to think of civil society as being when people take
part in demonstrations, but such a definition is too “one-sided and narrow,”
Sergey Prostakov says. In fact, “civil society is the ability to recognize
oneself part of a group having its own interests in the country and the state.”
Viewed in this way, the editor of
MBK news says, it is obvious that one of the very first manifestations of civil
society at the end of Soviet times and the beginning of Russian ones was the
coming together of veterans of the Soviet war in Afghanistan and their creation
of organizations to represent and defend their views (mbk-news.appspot.com/sences/sergej-prostakov-afganskaya-vojna/).
This week marks
the 40th anniversary of the introduction of the Soviet army into Afghanistan,
and that war, Prostakov says, still has “many lessons for our society,” albeit
most of them remain “unlearned.” But one
of those lessons, he suggests, is especially important for Russians in
2019.
When the formerly all-powerful state
collapsed and people were left on their own, often uncertain of how they should
interact with others, the editor continues, “there was one group in our society
of citizen in our society who approached those challenging times with a
resource rare at that time – a feeling of solidarity. These were the Afghan war
veterans.”
In many respects, they shouldn’t be
idealized. Out of their milieu arose much of organized crime. But there was one
way, Prostakov says, in which they did show the way. At a time when many viewed
them with hostility or indifference, they organized themselves to provide
mutual support and defend themselves.
The Afgantsy, as the soldiers
came to be known, quickly understood that “they were needed only by one
another. Their sense of distinctiveness
and commonality led to the formation of Ruslan Aushev’s Committee on the Affairs
of the Warrior-Internationalists and numerous regional organizations.
“In my native Kursk,” Prostakov says,
“Afgantsy organized a collection to create a monument to the 105 Kursk
residents who had died. In the majority of our cities, monuments to the Afghan
war were put up by the same means.” And because officials could not dismiss
them as individuals when they were organized, attitudes toward them began to
change.
By the mid-1990s, the Russian state
was ready to provide them with special benefits, including the right to import
tobacco and alcohol without having to pay any tariffs. They received housing benefits, and many of them
became well-off. Perhaps most important, being an Afganets became an
asset for politicians in elections.
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