Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – On September
10, 79-year-old Udmurt scholar Albert Razin burned himself to death to protest the
moves of Moscow and his republic against his nation’s language and culture. He erected
a sign declaring that “if tomorrow my language is going to disappear, then I am
prepared to die today.”
Initially, his action attracted
enormous attention in many non-Russian republics and in Moscow (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/09/udmurt-scholars-self-immolation.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/09/udmurt-scholars-self-immolation_17.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/09/udmurt-scholar-gave-his-life-not-for.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/10/the-last-udmurt.html).
But coverage of the story rapidly
died down because the authorities in Udmurtia banned any mention of Razin in
republic media. Anyone who violated that ban would be fired, they said; and as
a result, the story largely disappeared there -- and because media elsewhere
relied on Udmurt media, it largely disappeared elsewhere as well.
This week, however, Udmurts are
following the national tradition of marking the death of one of their number
seven days in advance of the anniversary itself. And on Sunday, family and
friends of Razin assembled in the Udmurt village of Kuzyumovo, 79 kilometers
from Izhevsk, to recall and honor the late scholar (idelreal.org/a/30825089.html).
Aleksandr Lekandrov, a local
resident, notes that the house Razin grew up in no longer exists, but many
people still there remember him. Some 200 people came to the commemoration. Lyubov Yevdokimov, Razin’s niece, said that
it was clear from the beginning that Albert Razin was “an unusual man” who
suffered greatly from the misfortunes of his people and language.
Nikolay Mikhaylov, another villager,
said that it was too soon to tell what Razin’s act would lead to. It has
already caused many Udmurts to rethink how they should respond to pressure
against their nation and its language. He acted out of despair, but his action
may give rise to hope.
Razin’s daughter Sofi is not among the
optimists. She says nothing has changed since her father’s
self-immolation. “People are still afraid
to say something about it. The media are afraid to talk about it because the
powers that be told everyone that if they did talk about her father, they would
be fired and not be able to get another job.
Udmurtia’s small public sector was
not represented: it is almost entirely concentrated in Izhevsk and controlled
by the regime. But Farid Zakiyev, the head of the All-Tatar Social Center, and
one o fhis colleagues did come to show their respects for someone who tried to
give new life for his people by sacrificing his own.
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