Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 17 – The 86
delegates to the Ninth Congress of Karels of the Republic of Karelia at a
meeting last weekend in Olonets called for their language as the titular nation
to be declared a state or official language. Theirs is the only titular
nationality in a non-Russian republic which does not have such a status.
This has long been a neuralgic issue
for the Karels, who account for only ten percent of the republic’s population
and whose close ties with Karels in Finland and Finland itself have kept Moscow
from agreeing to give them that status. (For background on this question, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/02/official-status-helps-but-doesnt-save.html.)
One of the reasons why the Congress
of Karels of the Republic of Karelia is so important as far as this question is
concerned is that since the authorities banned the Karelian Congress is that it
is the only independent but unregistered organization that purports to speak
for all Karelians and especially Karelian speakers.
The meeting was addressed by
republic head Artur Parfenchikov, something that clearly gave participants hope
they might be listened to, and was broadcast live both in Karel, the language
most delegates used and in simultaneous translation into Russian, because many
Karels do not speak the language and Karels want to be heard by Russian
speakers in the republic (rk.karelia.ru/social/v-olontse-otkrylsya-9-yj-sezd-karelov-respubliki-kareliya/).
A telling detail that says much about
where the Karels and the Karelian government are at present was the declaration
of the republic’s nationality policy minster, Sergey Kiselyev, that Karels from
abroad were not welcome at this meeting (stolicaonego.ru/news/vernuvshihsja-v-kareliju-iz-za-granitsy-poprosili-otkazatsja-ot-uchastija-v-sezde-karelov/).
Something of the feelings of the
delegates was suggested in the course of an interview Valery Potashov of Stolitsa
na Onego conducted with one of them, Natalya Antonova, a longtime Karel
language activist (stolicaonego.ru/analytics/mestnyj-vsegda-blizhe-k-zemle/),
She said that “our congress is the
representative organ of the Karels of the Republic of Karelia which takes decisions
in the name of the native and titular people in our region.” It isn’t registered
but this is “not required: Our activity is within the legal field because
according to federal law, social work can be undertaken both with registration
and without.”
The decisions are passed on to both
the republic authorities and Moscow. The responses of those at the republic
level are monitored and assessed at each succeeding congress, she continued.
But to date, there is no indication that Moscow pays any attention to the group’s
meetings or its decisions.
Antonova said she regretted both
that few Karelians are interested in working for the government or getting involved
in politics – too many are simply leaving the republic to seek a better life
elsewhere -- and that “our local ministries” are insufficiently “demanding” in
the course of their interaction with Moscow.
She added that she considers “Karelian language and
culture … a resource for Karelia and not a threat” and is certain that if the
language was given official status, it would lead more people to recognize that
and learn the language. If Karelia doesn’t have a distinct language, “then we
would not be anything more than a simple oblast.”
The
status of a language is part of its image,” Antonova continued. “In those
republics where it is [an official or state language] far from all the
population knows it but the status ensures for example that it is more widely
introduced in schools. Young people must understand that Karelian is
recognized, and its status here is thus important.”
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