Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 22 – In the
current ideological vacuum in Russia, when ever more people are angry and want
a focus for their anger, there is a temptation to come up with new holidays to
commemorate some past victory of Moscow over someone else, but many of these
attempts are not only ahistorical but dangerous, Vadim Trepavlov says.
The senior scholar from the Moscow
Institute of Russian History made that argument in the course of a long lecture
times to correspond to the 750th anniversary of the Golden Horde on “The
Turkic World of Eurasian: The Search of Historical Logic” to the Milli Shura
national council in Kazan (business-gazeta.ru/article/451129).
The difficulties Russians and others
have always had with talking about the relationship between the Golden Horde
and the emergent Russian state, he says, were brought into prominence again earlier
this year when a governor proposed establishing a national holiday on the anniversary
of what he believed was the end of the Mongol “yoke” in Russia (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/07/duma-set-to-make-anniversary-of-russias.html).
But not only the idea of a yoke but
even more the notion that “the great standoff on the Ugra” marked the end of
that period were historically problematic, Trepavlov says. Still worse, they
stirred up passions on all sides that a more reasoned consideration of the
subject could have allayed.
Unfortunately, instead of learning
from this and avoiding taking overly populist steps, he continues, Russian
officials seem set on dividing the population by coming up with even more problematic
holidays. The Moscow Oblast Duma now wants to mark the Day of Victory over
Crimean Forces near Moscow in 1572.
The scholars the Duma committee
considering this notion all said it was a great idea and should be promoted as
an all-Russian event. But Trepavlov
demures: “In the current situation, it is difficult to imagine a more ridiculous
and even dangerous ideal that giving the Crimean Tatars a negative reputation”
by organizing such a holiday.
Unfortunately, he says, more
nonsense is likely ahead. In 2023, many will want some public event to mark the
340th anniversary of the unification of Crimea to Russia and the concomitant
liquidation of the Crimean khanate. Those in Russia capable of opposing “the
historical illiteracy, political blindness and moral deafness” of some
officials need to get to work.
If they don’t, Russia will likely
suffer another series of self-inflicted wounds from long ago battles that
should be the subject of careful historical research rather than of bombastic
public speeches by those who do not know what actually occurred.
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