Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 25 – The official position of the Russian government is that the Syrian
authorities are the proper defenders of the ethnic Circassians who live in that
Middle Eastern country and that Moscow is not interested in their immigration
or “repatriation” to the North Caucasus which members of this ethnic group view
as their ancestral homeland.
Nonetheless,
several thousand Circassians have managed to come to the republics of Russia’s
North Caucasus, most of whom are from Syria. Some were Russian citizens to
begin with who had moved to Syria recently. Others had relatives in the North
Caucasus who could write letters of invitation, and still a third group did so
illegally.
Those who
have managed to get through, however, face an unhappy situation: the regional
and republic governments do almost nothing for them, Russian officials view
them as either Islamist or nationalist threats, and Moscow has imposed policies
designed to Russianize and even Russify those who hope to remain there.
All this
is documented in an important new article by Aleksandra Bayeva for the Meduza
news agency, who spoke with ethnic activists, officials and refugees themselves
in the North Caucasus (meduza.io/feature/2018/08/24/150-let-nazad-rossiya-deportirovala-cherkesov-v-siriyu-teper-oni-begut-obratno-no-i-zdes-im-ne-rady).
Of
the many points she makes, three are especially significant: First, she says
that Russia is doing everything it can to limit the influx of Circassians from
Syria lest they become importers of Islamist views or shift the ethnic balance in
North Caucasus republics or even trigger a movement to restore a unified
Circassian republic there.
Second,
although some regional officials were supportive initially, few are now,
fearful that any support for the Circassians will cost them their positions as happened
in the runup to the Sochi Olympics when Circassians around the world protested
against holding that athletic competition on the site of the 1864 genocide of
their nation.
In
the absence of such government support, Circassians have organized various
groups to send thousands of invitations to Circassians abroad to come to the
North Caucasus and to provide assistance in the form of food, housing and jobs
for those who make it. But in recent
months, these groups have come under increasing scrutiny and even repression.
And
third, as Olga Begretova of the Ochag National Organization says, the Russian
authorities immediately seek to Russify those Circassians who do manage to come
legally or not. “A repatriate must take
an examination in the history, law and language [of Russia],” she says. “This is a major obstacle.”
“Many
[Circassian] repatriates speak only Arabic and Kabardin. Why can’t they be
examined in Kabardin if they are going to be living among us?”
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