Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 30 – Ethnic
issues are typically specific to a particular time and place such as the rise
and suppression of Ingush protests about the border deal with Chechnya. These
matter enormously to the Ingush and may matter others as well, but some
developments often less widely covered that begin by addressing broader issues
may matter more.
The National Accent portal has
identified five such developments that are already affecting ethno-national
life in the Russian Federation and that are likely to cast a shadow on the
future as well. One could disagree with both what it includes and what it
doesn’t, but it does provide a useful point of departure (nazaccent.ru/content/31886-itogi-2019.html).
The five events Nazaccent lists and
explains are the following:
1.
The passage on first reading of a new law defining the
register of indigenous peoples. The
second reading is scheduled for January.
It defines three categories of people in the North: “those who can
confirm their national identity, live in places traditional for that, and
conduct a traditional way of life,” those who meet the first two but not the
third, and those who don’t meet the first two but do meet the third. It sets
different benefits for each.
Nazaccent sees this as a
major step forward ignoring the difficulties some in the North have faced in
proving their nationality (cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/11/moscows-system-of-special-benefits-for.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/12/to-protect-national-security-moscow.html).
2.
Cossacks officially unified with Putin naming
all-Russian ataman.
In order to solidify the status of Cossacks as a social stratum rather than an
ethnicity, Moscow has worked hard to unify all the Cossacks it recognizes in a
single organization committed to being a social stratum working to defend the
state rather than a nation with its own goals.
Nazaccent welcomes this
because it believes the officially registered Cossacks will play an increasing
role in helping the police and in controlling protests. But the official structure ignores the real
aspirations of most Cossacks who very much see themselves as a nation (cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/12/cossacks-launch-petition-drive-to-be.html
and this author’s “Cossackia: No Longer an Impossible Dream?” Jamestown
Eurasia Daily Monitor, February 21, 2019 at jamestown.org/program/cossackia-no-longer-an-impossible-dream/).
3.
Moscow spent a record one million US dollars in 2019
to support ethnic media. And Vladimir
Putin signaled that he expects to see the mainstream media devote more
attention to ethnic issues.
Moscow’s
spending on ethnic media works about to about four cents per capita among
Russia’s non-Russians and comes at a time when the center has ended much of its
support for many non-Russian publications and textbooks and is cutting back in
the amount of school time spent on and in non-Russian languages (cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/12/moscow-now-fining-regional-media-for.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/12/moscow-destroying-ingush-language.html,
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/11/moscow-intensifies-efforts-to.html).
4.
‘The Yakutsk shaman as a sign of neurosis’ among
Russians.
Aleksandr Gabyshev, the shaman warrior from Sakha who began a walk to Moscow to
exorcise the evil spirit of Putin, “despite all its parody, is a litmus test of
the obvious neurotic state of present-day Russian society” in which many either
passionately support or passionate oppose this “ethnic freak.” Both “show
emotional ill-health,” Nazaccent says.
In
fact, the shaman shook Russian society precisely because he found a way to tap
into the anger of the population about what is going on and provided the kind
of focus on those responsible that the Kremlin finds totally unacceptable (cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/07/will-shaman-from-sakha-do-what-russian.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/12/shaman-now-boxed-in-by-powers-in-sakha.html,
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/10/for-shaman-yakutsk-residents-protest.html).
5.
Twenty years after its creation, Federation of
National Cultural Autonomies finally receives state support. The Federal
Agency for Nationality Affairs has now allocated 100 million rubles (1.5
million US dollars) for this group.
Many
hoped and others feared the national cultural autonomies could be a stepping
stone to the abolition of the non-Russian republics, but most of have proven
vestigial and given little basis for either these hopes of fears. In many
cases, they have been captured by wealthy members of the national communities
and used to promote their personal agendas rather than the interests of the
nations (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/11/russias-national-cultural-autonomies.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/02/putin-using-salami-tactics-to-destroy.html).
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