Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 20 – Ever more
nations within the current borders of the Russian Federation are at the edge of
extinction, reflecting that Kremlin’s view that numerically small peoples or
those it views as closely related to ethnic Russians in any case must either
assimilate or die out, according to Ukrainian commentator Oleksy Nesterenko.
This process has passed largely
unnoticed in areas most people think of as ethnic Russian anyway, such as
Kostroma Oblast, where local people identified as a distinct Kostroma people in
the past but now have entirely gone over to an ethnic Russian identity, he says
(censoru.net/2020/03/20/russkie-kak-imja-naricatelnoe-spisok-korennyh-i-pochti-uzhe-assimilirovanyh-narodov-rossii.html).
It has attracted slightly more
attention when it involves peoples that Russian and Soviet officials in the
past have recognized as separate nationalities disappear. Among these are the
Abaza, the Aleuts, the Alyurtortsy, the Besermyane, the Vepsy, the Vods, the
Dolgins, the Izhors, the Itelmens, the Kamchadals, the Kereks, the Kets, the
Koryaks, the Kumandins, the Mansi, the Nagaybaks, the Nanays, the Saamy, the
Selkups, the Setu, the Soyots, the Tax, the Telengits, the Teleuts, the
Tofalars, the Tuvins, the Udeyevs, the Ulchi, the Khanty, the Chelkans, the
Chvins, the Chukchi, the Chulyms, the Shapsugs, the Shors, the Evenks, the Evens, the Entsy, the Eskimos and
the Yukagirs.
Some of these have already died out
or will in the next generation: there are no longer any Alyutortsy and all the
surviving Kereks are men. Others are larger and still have hopes of surviving,
but they lack official support in the form of schools and media; and
consequently, they are being rapidly assimilated. And only a very few, the Moksha
in particular, are fighting back.
But about almost all of these “we
will never find out anything more except from the archives because the representatives
of these ethnoses finally have broken with their roots and chosen the
generalized identity of ‘ethnic Russian,’” the Ukrainian writer says.
And he concludes by suggesting that
this pattern represents a clear warning to the Ukrainians: They, according to the
convictions of the Kremlin leadership can exist only as the very same ‘ethnic
Russians’ or die.”
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