Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 4 – The once
large Ukrainian nation within the borders of what is now the Russian Federation
is rapidly disappearing, the result of out-migration to Ukraine, elimination of
the nationality line in the passport, and assimilation by the more numerous
ethnic Russian community, according to Kyiv ethnographer Antaoly Momrik.
Ethnographers calculate, he says,
that two-thirds of the population in the Russian Far East and more than half of
the population of the Kuban have Ukrainian roots, but few in either place
continue to speak Ukrainian as their primary language or identify as Ukrainian
by nationality (ru.krymr.com/a/28834123.html).
But despite assimilationist
pressures – there are no Ukrainian-language schools in Russia in contrast to
the approximately 500 Russian-language schools in Ukraine, a pattern that
reflects the lack of concentration of Ukrainians in any one place in Russia –
much of the decline in the number of Ukrainians in Russia since 1991 reflects
outmigration.
Indeed, Momrik says, the reduction
of roughly four million at the end of Soviet times to two million now has been
mostly driven by migration back to Ukraine. (There has been a relatively small
migration in the opposite direction as Ukrainians have sought work in the
Russian Far East and Siberia.)
An additional factor depressing the
number of Ukrainians in Russian, the ethnographer continues, is the elimination
of the nationality line. As long as that existed, people retained the
nationality of their parents and grandparents even if they no longer really
identified as such or spoke the titular language. Once it was gone, they simply
identified themselves as they felt.
Momrik also points the relatively “short
cultural distance” between Ukrainians and Russians. That lack of distance and
the absence of areas of compact Ukrainian populations has done more to
contribute to assimilation than the presence or absence of Ukrainian schools.
Even if the latter existed, they would not have as much influence as many
think.
Passportization played a large role
in the disappearance of Ukrainians from the RSFSR in the pre-World War II
Soviet Union. In the 1926 census, there were six million Ukrainians in the
Russian republic, but according to the 1939 census, there were only two million
left. That happened because “we lost four million instantly when in the early
1930s, Russian passports began to be handed out in the Kuban and in Stavropol.”
Since that time, he says, “while
being Ukrainians by origin,” people in these regions “already in the third
generation have been living as ethnic Russians. They identify themselves as
Russians because their grandfathers had the nationality ‘Russian’ in their
passports” and so do they. Moreover,
most do not speak Ukrainian any more.
“Theoretically,” Momrik says, this
process could be reversed. “We all know the case of the Jews who for a millennium
did not speak Hebrew but only used it in religious life. And they were able to
transform a dead language into a living one.
Who can say that we cannot do this,” at least at the level of a
theoretical possibility.
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