Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 18 – In the final decades
of Soviet power, stories about small communities across the Russian Federation
so cut off from the rest of the world that they did not know there had been a
revolution in 1917 and asked their first visitors from the outside “who is tsar
now?” became a staple of the Russian media.
The number of such stories has
dwindled over the last 30 years, but another kind has replaced them, the story
of a small ethnic group under threat of disappearance both from the advance of modernity
and from the sometimes well-meaning but far too often counter-productive
efforts to save these groups.
One such story appears today in Komsomolskaya
pravda and involves the fate of the 137 members of the Finno-Ugric Mansi
nationality in Sverdlovsk Oblast.
Entitled “A Disappearing People: How the Mansi Live Today in the Urals,”
it asserts that “everything is being done to preserve” these small peoples (ural.kp.ru/daily/217170/4271977/).
The story’s
author, Yuliya Stalina, says that the Mansi have already changed a great deal
in recent decades. They used to be reindeer herders but now subsist as hunters,
fishermen, and gatherers of wild herbs. Most still live in small villages and
want to stay there because when they go into cities they “become hopeless.”
In the words of one of her
interlocutors, the Mani are “modest, kind and naïve as children,” and their
naivete is used by poachers, tourists and others to exploit them. One means is
the introduction of alcohol, and the Mansi are now suffering from abnormally
high rates of alcoholism. One reason: there is no local medical point any more
to treat them.
Stalina doesn’t say, but that is
likely the result of Putin’s now infamous health care optimization campaign,
which has closed thousands of medical offices in rural parts of the country in
order to save money.
Local government officials are trying
to help by integrating the Mansi more fully into the life of the ethnic Russian
majority and local companies are doing so by providing job training, but the
consequences of these programs have been to pull the young Mansi away from
their parents and accelerate the demise of the nation.
Some local officials want to convert
the Mani district into a nature reserve and hire the Mani as guides and park
rangers, but it is not clear that such efforts won’t also be counterproductive,
attracting even more tourists into their area and pulling the Mani even further
from their traditions.
Saving numerically small peoples is
never easy because many of the steps that officials and businesses are inclined
to take accelerate their demise rather than slow them, but there is even less
hope for the survival of these peoples in places where outsiders view the
dominant community views these groups as “naïve” and backward.
That is the case with this
Finno-Ugric people and all too often many others in the case of Russians today,
an attitude that allows them to convince themselves that they are saving a
people by destroying it.
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