Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 27 – Calls across the
United States to take down statues honoring figures of the past who abused
ethnic minorities have now come to Alaska, where an initiative group in Sitka
is seeking the removal or demolition of a statue to Aleksandr Baranov, the
ruler of Russian settlements in North America at the end of the 18th
and beginning of the 19th centuries.
Not surprisingly, some Russians are
outraged, have denounced such plans as part of “a war against the Russian past,”
and are demanding that the Russian government intervene to signal their
displeasure even if it is not in a position to block this step (stoletie.ru/lenta/na_alaske_khotat_snesti_pamatnik_pravitelu_russkih_poselenij_799.htm).
A statue of Baranov has been standing
in Sitka, Alaska’s capital, since 1989; but representatives of the Tlingit native
peoples say it must be removed from its prominent location because of his
racist policies. Not all residents want
to see that happen, and city officials are seeking a compromise, including possibly
retaining the statue but erecting a statue to the Tlingit.
The statue of Baranov remains in
place, and no decision has yet been taken to do anything to it. But even the suggestion that an American city
might remove a statue to a Russian has been enough to spark anger among
officials and commentators in Moscow. They want their government to take
actions to defend the monument.
“We need to talk about this because
we are talking about our history and our heroes,” Andrey Klimov, head of the
Federation Council’s foreign relations committee. He said that taking down
statues in this way represented “a form of barbaric insanity … We cannot not
take note of this,” and the Russian embassy in Washington must speak out.
Valery Voronov and Natalya
Makarov entitle their article about the discussions in Alaska and the Russian
reaction to them, “Alaska has Begun a War with the Russian Past” (vz.ru/world/2020/6/26/1047126.html).
They cite Klimov but also and more extensively Moscow commentator Vladimir
Solovyev.
The television host says that if the
Americans won’t respect monuments to Russian heroes, perhaps Moscow should seek
to have these statues moved to somewhere in the Rsusian Federation. He added that such attacks on statues of
figures from the past in the United States was not so much about politics as
about the kind of mental illnesses Freud talked about.
“This isn’t even leftwing
radicalism,” he says, “but about issues” the founder of psychoanalysis talked
about. “This is an attempt of fighting the past, the denial of one’s own past because
it is so heavy. This is a great big Oedipus complex,” the result of the failure
of Americans to know and respect their own history.
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