Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 29 – Russians today
are “much more imperialist than they were in the last years of the USSR,
Vladimir Melikhov says; and in the pursuit of empire, they are prepared to
sacrifice their freedoms, a loss that means that “it is completely possible
that the present-day Russian Federation will share the fate of the USSR.”
But even before that happens, the Cossack
historian tells Vyacheslav Puzeyev of the After
Empire portal, the attitude of Russians has made absolutely impossible the
formation of democratic institutions and federalism for all nations within the
country’s borders, including the Cossacks (afterempire.info/2018/03/29/melikhov/).
“If there are no democratic institutions
such as freedom of speech, division of powers or an independent judicial
system, how can one speak about any federation?” Melikhov asks. And given their
absence, neither the Cossacks nor any other people can hope for a real
republic. If the country disintegrates before democracy arrives, “in place of
one dictator, there could be 85.”
Consequently, a Cossack Republic for
the time being must remain “a project of the future,” he continues. “It will
become possible only on the basis of real federalism and stable institutions of
self-administration. When power in various regions will belong to their
population and not to governors and mayors appointed ‘from above, then real
change will occur.”
Melikhov has been persecuted by the
Russian government for his efforts in the media and as an organizer of two
memorial museums to enlighten the Russian people about the real nature of the Cossacks. The authorities over the course of a decade
have brought him to court 500 times in the hopes he will stop.
But Melikhov says he has no plans to
do so, adding that the repression he has been subject to in itself shows “what
a dictatorship leads to.” The powers that be crack down on him because they see
in his work on the history of the Cosssacks under the Soviets a reflection of
the earlier oppressors of his nation.
The Soviets committed genocide
against the Cossacks, but the post-Soviet regime is seeking to destroy the Cossack
tradition by turning everything upside down, presenting Cossacks as the invariable
supporters of the Russian state, as simply a social stratum rather than a
nation, and as harshly authoritarian rather than freedom loving, the historian
says.
They are thus destroying the
Cossacks in a new and dangerous way even as they present themselves as
supporters of the neo-Cossacks in Russia today, Melikhov says. Most of these new Cossacks know nothing about
the traditions of the real Cossacks but simply have failed at life, want to
play act, and to win points from the regime.
“Historically,” he says, “the Cossacks
evolved as a separate ethnic group, quite different from other ethnic groups in
the Russian Empire. It had its own democratic institutions … and therefore if
one speaks about the rebirth of the Cossacks, one must above all speak about the
rebirth of this political culture which arose over centuries.”
Melikhov concludes: “The Cossacks
always were independent and self-sufficient in the organization of their own
lives and never counted on the powers for assistance. They were masters of
their own land, but today few understand these terms,” and the Russian
government wants to keep it that way lest the Cossacks become a model for
others.
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