Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 30 – A writer for
the official newspaper of the Russian parliament says that today “the most
important question” for residents of the Russian Federation is “what’s your
nationality?” a question that is not easy for everyone to answer but one which
is asked with such insistence that those of mixed nationality are regularly
urged to carry their internal passports.
Suggestions in the days since the
Biryulevo clashes that Russia is entering a new age of nationalism (novayagazeta.ru/comments/60705.html) are typically discussed at the level of high
politics – is this development good or disastrous for the Russian Federation
and President Vladimir Putin(profile.ru/article/chem-narod-ni-teshilsya-gosudarstvo-dolzhno-perestat-igrat-na-ksenofobskikh-chuvstvakh-grazh
and sovsekretno.ru/articles/id/3880/).
But the increasing “nationalization”
of Russian life is having an impact on the residents of that country even if
they are not personally caught up in violent conflicts, an impact that is
discussed by Nadezhda Arabkina who is a commentator on social issues for the Parlamentskaya
gazeta (pnp.ru/comment/detail/40316).
In an article titled “The Most
Important Question – What’s Your Nationality?”Arabkina notes that she has a
particular problem in that regard: her father is an ethnic Korean and her
mother is an ethnic Russian. Consequently, there are equal chances she could be
“the victim” of nationalist skinheads or immigrants from Central Asia or the
Caucasus.
To be convinced of this, she says,
she doesn’t even have to leave her multi-national apartment building. Some
neighbors are convinced that she is not Russian, while others are certain that
she is. Some respect national traditions and differences, but some
unfortunately do not.
But the explosion of media coverage
of inter-ethnic clashes has exacerbated the situation, with ever more people
being conscious of their own group, worried about threats from others and thus
becoming hostile to them. Not surprisingly, some of the results would be funny
if they weren’t so tragically sad, Arabkina suggests.
One graduate of Moscow State
University’s philosophy faculty, whose mother was a Lithuanian, not long ago
told an immigrant to the Russian capital that he should “get out of my city.” He clearly “does not want to think about it now, but other people
sometime cried these same words at his grandfather and grandmother.”
In another case, she says, someone
who is “half Tatar” but was baptized by his ethnic Russian mother in a Lipetsk
village “suddenly became to demonstratively purchase halal” goods and go the
mosque, but didn’t bother to “remove the cross” he had always worn.
And in a third more serious case, an
ethnic Armenian resident of Moscow who had never lived in Armenia wants to get
married to an ethnic Russian woman but is getting threats from her former
husband, a Daghestani. The issue is being resolved through the diaspora but for
the time being, the young woman is carrying a pistol.”
Thus, Arabkina
continues, there is now “a trend” – to “survive” one must join one’s own
national camp. Some of her Korean friends, she says, “who do not know any language
except Russian” are nonetheless put off when they learn that her husband is of “a
different nationality.” It would be
easier, she is told, if she would get involved “in Moscow’s Korean community.”
“Every morning since the pogrom in
Biryulevo, she writes, “I have heard one and the same thing: ‘Take your
passport with you!’” Her family members are concerned that without it, she will
be identified as an illegal immigrant, and indeed, policemen have challenged
her, often asking indirect questions to get at the issue of nationality.
One, for example, asked her whether
she lived in Moscow. When she said yes, he asked where the Minin and Pozharsky
monument is, something every native would know. When she responded that it was
next to the execution place in Red Square, the policeman said that “everything
is clear.”
Arabkina says that a Tajik woman
cleans her apartment, but she knows little or nothing about that woman’s life. “How
is she paid? Where does she live? How many relatives does she feed with her
earnings? I’m not interested. For me, it
is convenient and pleasing that she with gratitude takes my cash and smiles at
me as if I had given her a million.”
Near her apartment, the
parliamentary newspaper commentator says, there is a school whose almost half
of the students in the first class are not ethnic Russians. The teacher told her that there are so many
nationalities that the school even has an ethnic German. But she said one student doesn’t know his nationality.
“I think he is a Tajik or an Uzbek,” the teacher said.
What a happy child, Arabkina
concludes, “how simple his life is without these unending discussions about the
nationality question and the national idea.”
But she leaves the impression that for her and those about her, those
are “the most important questions” and that in the future, they will be for
that child as well.
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