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Russian Analyst Comments on Recent Anti-Polish Attacks in Moscow

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  • Russian Analyst Comments on Recent Anti-Polish Attacks in Moscow

    Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union, DC
    Aug 23 2005

    Russian Analyst Comments on Recent Anti-Polish Attacks in Moscow


    (August 23, 2005)
    Gazeta.ru
    August 20, 2005 Kirill Kharatyan article: "Who Are These Russians,
    for Whom..."


    The incident with the Poles, exactly three of which were beaten in
    Moscow makes me uneasy. It was as if it was in response to the three
    students from Russia that got it from the Warsaw skinheads.
    Supposedly it was by chance, although how one can distinguish a Pole
    from a non-Pole on the Moscow streets is totally incomprehensible.


    Even if he, God forbid, were to say something in Polish, I am almost
    certain that very few of the Moscow residents capable of beating
    someone just like that (because they did not even take anything away
    from those who were beaten), is able to distinguish Polish from Czech
    or Croatian. Thus I see direct intent in this incident: somewhere
    there are agents, those who want to take revenge, who evidently
    believe that they should aid the helpless state respond in a fitting
    way to... well I do not even know to what. Moreover, one may recall
    that in Russia we have always related to the Poles with suspicion -
    both when they conquered us (there will even be a holiday here on 4
    November marking the liberation of the country from the
    Polish-Lithuanian invaders), and when we conquered them and crushed
    the Warsaw Uprising.


    Here some fresh data from sociologists and human rights advocates has
    been dug up: it turns out that sixty percent of the residents of
    Russia possess xenophobic sentiments. The majority of those polled
    say Russia is for the Russians.

    This is quite understandable logic, This is the reflection of army
    hazing on society as a whole: we are Russians, we have been here a
    long time, therefore everyone else is human dirt, which we are ready
    to use out of the goodness of our hearts for various dirty jobs, but
    do not let them dare imagine that they can marry here, that they have
    some kind of rights here and that they can walk around here like they
    were at home.

    On one hand, one may reply to this idiocy saying in essence that
    there are no Russians, that this is a gigantic mixture of Slavic,
    Finno-Ugric and Turkic tribes, which occupied the territory of all
    these tribes, that genetically a native resident of Arkhangelsk
    differs as much from a native Rostov resident as much as he does from
    a black. But at the same time Arkhangelsk and Rostov residents are
    considered to both be Russians. Here is still another argument: the
    majority of Russians consider themselves to be Orthodox - but then
    the Savior said: there is neither Jew nor Greek and commanded one to
    love his neighbor like himself.

    On the other hand, why does one get so worked up because the Poles
    beat up Russians there? If Russia is for Russians, then does not one
    have to assume that Poland is for Poles? These Russians got around
    there, and that means that it is necessary to relate to them the same
    way that we relate to Poles, Azerbaijanis and blacks.

    Now let's imagine what would happen if xenophobia in the form that
    exists in Russia now were to spread outside of its borders. Once
    again a recent incident: some kind of madman knifed eight people in
    the area of the square of three train stations, of which three were
    Armenians and another three were Azerbaijanis. That means in response
    we should get two each Russian embassy employees in Armenia and
    Azerbaijan knifed, as well as one journalist in each of these
    countries.

    Arguments that he was insane do not work: Poles in Warsaw also said
    that those who attacked the children were scum that exists in every
    society and - by the way - very quickly got on their trail.

    The investigation of the Moscow incidents has still not led to any
    results, and I predict that, there will not be any. That is, it is
    quite possible that they will find someone and there should be a
    severe punishment of this unfortunate declasse element, but this will
    hardly be the source of the idea of a retaliatory and symmetrical
    beating of the Poles.

    However fallout from this event, the influence of this unpunished
    symmetry certainly will remain. For they somehow talked rather
    little, unwillingly and under the gun about this event in society, in
    the mass media and in official statements. In Russia they know very
    well how to understand what the government wants in actuality and
    what it talks about pro forma. That means the people will understand
    correctly: dislike of Poles and (more broadly) xenophobia is our
    method.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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