Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 21 – Today,
Circassians and their supporters mark the 153rd anniversary of the day
Russian forces expelled Circassian nation from their homeland in 1864; but the
Russian genocide directed against the Circassians did not begin on that day or
end then. Instead, it began in the middle of the 18th century and
lasted until the 20th, according to Merab Chukhua.
Chukhua, a professor at Tbilisi
State University, the head of the Circassian Cultural Center there, and one of the
authors of Georgia’s recognition of the Circassian expulsion as an act of
genocide, argues that Russia’s act of genocide against the Circassians lasted
far longer than that (caucasustimes.com/ru/professor-merab-chuhua-o-priznanii-genocida-cherkesov/).
“The Circassian genocide began in
the 18th century,” the scholar says. “It lasted more than 150 yers
and ended not in 1864 but in the beginning of the 20th century in
connection with the continuing forced resettlement and destruction of the
Circassian people,” a process that the Russian Empire stopped only as a result
of the 1905 revolution.
That lengthy act of violence against
the Circassians was carefully studied by Georgian and other experts, he
continues, and it is one of the reasons why the Georgian parliament became the
first and so far the only national government in the world to recognize that
what the Russian state had done to the Circassians was a genocide.
Like the Armenians, the Circassians
are dispersed around the world; but in contrast to them, Moscow actively
opposes international recognition of its crimes against the Circassians as an
act of genocide, Chukhua says. Instead,
it has submerged the Circassians into the general category of Rossiyane.
But that ignores the fact that “the
Circassians … were forcibly exiled from Circassian lands, from their own
motherland” and that “Russia does not recognize this or give them the status of
compatriots.” Instead, Moscow insists that it will take in only those
Circassians whose ancestors Russia brutally expelled who somehow have learned
Russian.
Despite the current situation, one
in which Moscow tries to obscure, suppress and hijack Circassian commemorations
of 1864, the Georgian scholar says that he remains optimistic about the future.
“Before our eyes, a new world is being born, a new order and new governmental
relations.”
“’Figures’ like Putin come and go,
and Russia too will be changed,” Chukhua says. “I think that in Russia the
strength will be found to say ‘no’ [to Putin’s approach to the Circassians] and
to put an end to all the sufferings of the Circassian people. Russia has no
other possible variant.”
If Russia doesn’t, he says, “Russia will
remain a country without the Caucasus, including without the Circassians.” It
must recognize the genocide of the Circassian people, and that should not be
hard because it was the tsarist authorities and not the present-day Russian
ones who carried it out.”
“It is a well-known fact that when a
criminal acknowledges his guilt, it makes things easier for him. That would be
the case for Russia today” if only it could take that step.
No comments:
Post a Comment