Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 25 – Commemorating anniversaries
becomes problematic when they do not reinforce one another but rather raise
questions about the past and the future by calling attention to different
aspects of the national past. That is true this year as Russia marks not one
but three World War II anniversaries. But it is even more so for Tatarstan.
On May 27, the Middle Volga republic
passed the centenary of the Soviet Russian decree establishing the Autonomous
Tatar Socialist Soviet Republic, an anniversary that the Tatars were not able
to fully mark because of the pandemic but have been devoting attention to in
the weeks since (business-gazeta.ru/article/472909).
But even before those could be
completed, Tatarstan today marks the centenary of the formation of its own organs
of power in that republic; and on August 30, it will mark at one and the same
time the Day of the Republic and the Day of Kazan, assuming that the
coronavirus doesn’t get in the way.
Each of these has different meanings
for the Tatars and for Moscow. Today, Russian officials stressed how much
Moscow has given the Tatars; but those in Tatarstan who mark the other centenaries
may be inclined to focus on exactly the opposite, on how much Moscow has taken
away from them.
Vladimir Putin wants to promote the
notion of a common stream of Russian history, but the plethora of holidays that
have emerged are having exactly the opposite effect, leading people to reflect
not on how much all the nations in his country have in common but exactly the
opposite.
And the more such holidays emerge
and are marked, the more likely that is to be the case because for each date,
people on all sides of the issue are likely to write articles, produce
television series and plays, and discuss what that holiday as opposed to others
is about and why it and not others is important or not.
Under totalitarian conditions, multiple
holidays may not be a problem: they may even be helpful to the regime. But
under less than complete totalitarianism, they are likely to have exactly the
opposite effect. That is certainly the case in Tatarstan, and it is likely to
be the case elsewhere as well.
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