Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 28 – St.
Petersburg’s Gorod 812 portal conducted an open online poll of its
visitors as to what country they would prefer to have been born in. 2200 people
took part. 45 percent named Western countries, just under 20 percent said
Russia, but significantly, the non-existent country of Ingermanland attracted
more votes (441) than did Russia (370).
Moreover, another non-existent
country, the Republic of Petersburg, received 146 votes, making the total for
regionalist projects in Russia’s northern capital nearly a quarter of those
taking part far greater than for Russia – 587 to 441 (gorod-812.ru/tolko-20-protsentov-hoteli-byi-roditsya-v-nyineshney-rossii/).
Commenting on the results, the
editors of Gorod 812 helpfully provided a definition of Ingermanland: “a
territory in the North-West of the Russian Federation which never has had its
own statehood if you don’t count North Ingria, which existed for a brief time
during the Civil War.”
The poll is not based on a
representative sample; and consequently, those with particular agendas are
certain to have taken part in it to boost their standing in larger numbers than
their totals in the population. But at
the very least, these results show that regionalist ideas are circulating in
St. Petersburg.
The Tallinn-based regionalist site, Region.Expert,
suggested that the results were “clear evidence of the popularity of regionalist
ideas in St. Petersburg and the territories surrounding it which still bear the
ridiculous name, Leningrad Oblast,” a place few expect to find a hotbed of such
ideas (region.expert/inger-vote/).
It is of course possible, Region.Expert
adds, that those who named Ingermanland or the Republic of Petersburg as their preferred
birthplaces were only echoing the words of the well-known punk musician Vadim Kurylyov
that “it’s time to get out of this country, but together with our own city!’”
In fact, there has been a
significant regionalist movement in North-West Russia for a decade, one large enough
and active enough to attract the attention of the Russian authorities. (For background,
see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/07/a-new-aspirant-to-be-fourth-baltic.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/02/regionalist-movements-now-under-kremlin.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/06/regionalism-threatens-russia-today-way.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/05/by-attacking-free-ingria-leader-moscow.html,
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/10/window-on-eurasia-ingermanland-is-ready.html.)
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