Russia’s Finno-Ugrics tell Medvedev They’d Be Happy to Have Half the Rights of Ethnic Russians in Estonia
22.05.08
Baku,
May 22 – A Mordvin newspaper has published an open letter to Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev bemoaning the ways in which Russian officials
are undermining the future of the Finno-Ugric peoples of the country and
saying that the latter would be more than pleased if they had even a few
of the rights the supposedly “oppressed” ethnic Russians do in Estonia.
The appeal, which was prepared by Grigory Musalev, the head of the Mordvin
Republic Foundation for the Salvation of the Erzyan Language, appears in
the current issue of the Saransk newspaper, Erzyan’ Mastor (www.erzia.saransk.ru/arhiv.php?nom11=281).
It has already been picked up by the Sobkorr.ru site in Moscow (www.sobkorr.ru/news/4833C742EDC04.html).
The demographic decline of the Finno-Ugric peoples within the Russian
Federation is ahas been going on throughout the last century, but Musalev
argues that Russian officials now are not only accelerating that decline
by their policies but destroying the very fabric of Finno-Ugric life in
their rush to “russianize” and “Christianize” these peoples.
He notes that of the five governors of Finno-Ugric regions, only one
– Nikolai Merkushkin of Mordvinia – is currently a Finno-Ugric, but
even under his leadership, “the languages and cultures of the Erzya and
Moksha ethnoses [the two component parts of the Mordvin nation] have come
to a critical condition.”
And Musalev points out that they and the other officials who are organizing
the upcoming Congress of Finno-Ugric Peoples are precisely those who prepared
the denunciation of Katrin Saks’ report to the Euro-Parliament which
described the terrible situation which these nations now find themselves
in the Russian Federation.
“A congress with such representation,” Musalev continues, is “a
fiction clearly intended to conceal from the international community [and
especially from the three currently independent Finno-Ugric countries,
Estonia, Finland and Hungary] the rapidly approaching death in Russia of
the Finno-Ugric Peoples.”
But the Finno-Ugric activist uses his letter to make a broader point
that just about the latest example of Russian officials attempting to take
over nominally public organizations and thus prevent others from finding
out what is going on. Indeed, these arrangements suggest that some officials
are “satisfied” by the disappearance of these peoples and their languages.
Last year, he writes, 66 intellectuals signed an appeal to the head
of the Mordvin republic asking for a meeting to discuss how to save their
native languages and cultures. They did not get a response, although officials
denounced them as “extremists” and “nationalists” for even raising
the issue.
It turns out, he says, that the governor “is interested only in priests
and sportsmen. All the rest – economics, culture, education, science,
literature, and his native people – are a matter of indifference. “
And instead of building factories and schools, Merkushkin is “putting
up churches for a population” consisting of followers of the national
religion or unbelievers.
“Soon there will be more priests in Mordvinia than teachers, scholars,
workers and peasants, and the republic will cease its existence,” Musalev
writes. But even before that happens, “crime and prostitution are flourishing
as a result of the collapse of morality and the forced imposition of Christianity”
on a pagan people.
When Mordvins knew their national languages and followed their traditional
religion, their “own ethnic god, there was practically no crime among
them. But now they violate the law, morality and the precepts of Christ
just as frequently as Orthodox Christians. That which was built by [their]
ancestors over the course of centuries is being [quickly] destroyed.”
Another target of Musalev’s anger is Valeriy Tishkov, the director
of the Moscow Institute of Ethnology and another one of the organizers
of the upcoming Finno-Ugric congress. Tishkov, Musalev says, has “advised”
Moscow to view all those who speak up on behalf of the Finno-Ugric peoples
as “extremists and separatists.”
(At the end of 2007, prosecutors in Mordvin did bring an accusation
of extremism against the newspaper in which Musalev’s letter appears
and the organization he heads, but there is no indication that they did
so on the basis of Tishkov’s advice. More likely, the authorities took
this step because of the group’s regular criticism of Governor Merkushkin.)
Musalev appeals to the Russian president to do three things. First,
he expresses the hope that Medvedev will intervene to open up the Finno-Ugric
congress to genuine voices of the people. Second, he asks Medvedev to pay
more attention to what the people say than to what self-satisfied and self-interested
officials say.
And third, he appeals to the new president to stop the forcible russianization
and Christianization of non-Russian and non-Christian peoples lest Russia
lose the vitality that its multi-national and poly-confessional nature
has conferred upon it from its foundation to the most recent days.
If the Finno-Ugric peoples disappear – and according to Musalev, “someone
in Russia very much wants” their death – then where will Russian find
its future Ilya Muromtsevs, its Shalyapins, its Gorkys, its Lenins, its
Yesenins and its Putins in the future, all of whom have their roots in
this ancient group of nations?
And then he concludes with a statement that highlights his despair but
that could lead to more charges of “extremism”: We Finno-Ugrics, he
says “will be grateful to the government of Russia if the indigenous
peoples of [this country] are given even half of the rights of the ‘mistreated’
Russians in the Baltic countries and Ukraine.”
Paul Goble
Source: Window
on Eurasia
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