Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 21 – Today marks the
156th anniversary of the expulsion of most Circassians from the
North Caucasus after they had resisted the forces of the Russian Empire for 101
years, completing an act of genocide that resulted in deaths or expulsion of
more than three million of them, something that even now Moscow refuses to
acknowledge or address.
Because this year’s memorial day is
not what the Russians call a “round” one – that is having a date divisible by
five, ten or 100 years – and because the pandemic has meant that almost all the
activities Circassians engaged in have been online rather than as in many past
years, the streets, it has attracted less attention than some past years.
But ignoring this year’s anniversary
is wrong for three reasons. First, precisely because 90 percent of Circassians
live beyond the current borders of the Russian Federation and because
Circassians within them remain officially divided, the Internet this year was
able to play a greater role than on any previous memorial day.
Second, and arising from this,
Circassians as Circassians are more united than at any point since the Russian
genocide more than 150 years ago. The Internet has allowed them to overcome
existing nation-state borders and the divisions the Soviets imposed and the
Russian state continues to insist upon.
And third, this unity has not been
not limited to the affirmation of a common identity but includes an
increasingly common agenda, including but not limited to the return of
Circassians to the homeland especially from war-torn countries in the Middle
East and demands for greater and more honest discussions of crime visited upon
that nation.
If the mass media have devoted less attention
to the Circassians than they did in the run-up to the 150th
anniversary of the genocide which coincided with Putin’s Olympics on the very site
where Circassians were killed and expelled, scholars and analysts both Circassian
and not published more studies than ever before.
And thanks to Circassian activists
who created a virtual world for the Circassians everywhere to turn to, this research
and writing is reaching far more people. They in turn have become more active
both via the Internet and person to person, helping Circassians return to the
homeland and promoting Circassian identity in the upcoming Russian census.
But the best evidence for their growing
unity and strength has been Moscow’s reaction which has lashed out at those who
write up Circassians issues, most prominently declaring the US-based Jamestown
Foundation an unfriendly source because of its articles on Circassians, and
also has worked against those who try to return or e-identify.
In reporting this year’s
anniversary, Circassian Naima Neflyasheva in her North Caucasus Through the
Centuries blog cites the words of Madina Khakuasheva, a brilliant
Circassian novelist and scholar, from the latter’s book On the Road Home
(kavkaz-uzel.eu/blogs/1927/posts/43347).
In it, she appeals to the Most High,
asking him to “preserve the wings of the people so that they will be able to
fly!” This year’s memorial day shows
that the Circassians have their wings and are flexing their muscles and that
the day is coming ever closer when they will again live in a Greater
Circassia, proud and free.
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