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The Danger Of Ethnic Homogeneity

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  • The Danger Of Ethnic Homogeneity

    THE DANGER OF ETHNIC HOMOGENEITY
    By Boris Kagarlitsky

    The Moscow Times
    Sept 18 2008
    Russia

    Judging by the mood in Tbilisi just before and after the war, it is
    clear that Georgian and Russian societies are remarkably similar. In
    both countries, we see the desire to rally the people around the state
    regardless of their leaders' faults and mistakes. They both also
    believe that the state should hold onto its separatist territories
    at all costs.

    Look at the parallels between Chechnya and South Ossetia. The Kremlin
    used force and widespread destruction as justifiable measures in the
    Chechen war, and Georgia considered the bombing of South Ossetian
    towns as a just punishment for the republic's rebellion.

    But there is one fundamental difference between public opinion in
    Georgia and Russia. In Georgia, nationalism is pervasive, and the few
    who might feel differently are careful to remain silent. In Russia,
    dissenting voices can always be heard, even when patriotic fervor
    reaches unprecedented levels.

    In contrast, when a small state dominated by a single ethnic group
    whips up nationalistic sentiment, it has an amazing power to mobilize
    the entire community in support of a single idea or belief, leaving
    almost no room for criticism. During the Soviet era, the Moscow
    intelligentsia took a patronizing pleasure in the ethnic solidarity
    among people from the Baltic states -- particularly when it was
    compared to the lack of unification among ethnic Russians. Many
    Russians admired the Baltic song festivals, in which thousands of
    people lined up in long columns. But the scenes always made me uneasy
    because of their striking resemblance to the mass rallies of Hitler's
    Third Reich.

    Georgia is far from being the only former Soviet republic with a
    uniform public opinion. You would have trouble finding anyone in
    Armenia who could understand Azerbaijan's position regarding the
    conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. Many contemporary Turkish intellectuals
    would willingly risk going to jail for stating that almost 100 years
    ago, a genocide of Armenian citizens did, in fact, occur on Turkish
    soil, even though the Turkish government denies it. But I do not know
    of a single Armenian intellectual who has ever written anything that
    treats Turkish history and culture with respect.

    Every year, many young Israelis refuse military duty in the occupied
    territories and activists from Israel's political left speak out
    for the rights of Palestinians. Yet decisions by the authorities
    in Estonia and Lithuania designed to offend the feelings of their
    Russian minorities, such as moving the Bronze Soldier monument in
    Tallinn and prohibiting Soviet symbols in Vilnius, did not provoke
    the slightest protest among any Estonians and Lithuanians, even among
    the most liberal of them. Causing divisions among people along ethnic
    lines is by no means a sign of pluralism.

    Paradoxically, the split in Russian public opinion between supporters
    and opponents of the country's imperial traditions is far more similar
    to public sentiment in Western Europe than to many countries on
    Russia's borders. It is inevitable that Russia's "post-imperial"
    consciousness evokes criticism, discussion and reflection in
    society. The same is largely true in Ukraine with its sharp division
    between the Ukrainian majority and the substantial Russian minority.

    Russians can portray themselves as either victims or aggressors. They
    can take pride in their history or be ashamed of it. We experience
    conflicting emotions regarding both our past and our present. We
    are free to argue about our country's future course. These are all
    characteristics of a healthy society that, having once fallen ill
    with the disease of nationalism, is now likely to recover.

    Unfortunately, the same cannot be said with any certainty regarding
    the ethnically homogeneous former Soviet republics.
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