Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 16 – The decision by
the authorities in Sochi to take down a memorial to Russian forces there in the
1830s after protests by Circassians is extremely dangerous, Artemy Lebedev says,
because it will only encourage them and others Russia conquered to make more
demands so as to rewrite the past and undermine Russia’s future.
In a commentary that has been
translated by the Justice for the North Caucasus portal, the Russian television
journalist uses extremely intemperate
language to denounce the Circassians for asking that the monument be removed
and the Sochi authorities for agreeing to their requests (justicefornorthcaucasus.info/?p=1251682365).
But Lebedev’s remarks are important
as an indication of just how sensitive this issue is and how much any
concession by Russian authorities to demands by non-Russians for historical justice
now spark heated opposition and at the same time real fears about the future.
They thus merit being quoted in extenso.
According to Lebedev, the
Circassians picked up the idea of demanding the memorial be removed from
watching “too much television” and seeing “how in America a tiny group of
people can ruin the basic features of a society.” They then decided that they could “do the
same thing” in Russia.
They demanded that a small memorial
to Russian soldiers who fought and died in the Caucasus almost two centuries ago
be taken down because in their view the monument was not about the past but
about Russia’s current and future intentions and represents an insult to the
national memory and status of the Circassians.
The fact that the Sochi authorities
backed down and removed the monument “is absolutely the start of the opening of
a Pandora’s box,” one in which ever more non-Russian nationalists will emerge
and demand that there be no memorials to how their great-grandfathers were
defeated by the Russians, the commentator says.
“As we have always been told that we
should not forget our history” and as the new amendments to the Russian Constitution
mandate, Russians must defend their history and not concede to others who say
that since the actions that Russian forces took then “can’t be repeated now,”
they should not be remembered and honored at all.
Consequently, he continues “everything
which reminds us of what happened 200 years ago must be erased” in their view,
even though those who feel that way represent only a tiny part of the Circassians
who in turn represent only “one percent” of the inhabitants of the place where
the monument was put up.
“What
will happen next?” According to Lebedev, it will be a disaster in which “all the
other monuments will begin to be demolished because it turns out that there wasn’t
a single Russian tsar who did not do something bad. Everyone who increased the
size of Russian territory” must be forgotten rather than memorialized.
If
this principle is followed, he says, then “in principle, there cannot be any
monument to any war” because in wars people die, deaths are always bad, and “the
winner has no right to celebrate anything” if a tiny minority objects. But the majority
has rights too, and they must insist on them.
No comments:
Post a Comment