By
Paul Goble
Twenty
of the 24 Finno-Ugric peoples live on the territory of the Russian Federation,
and more than 3 million of the 25 million people in the Finno-Ugric world are
citizens of that country. Since 1991, the three Finno-Ugric countries in the
West—Estonia, Finland and Hungary—have sought to develop relations with their
co-ethnics in Russia. The latter have welcomed such initiatives and
participated in a variety of cooperative ventures, including a series of world
congresses of the Finno-Ugric peoples. In general, the members of this group continue
to be enthusiastic about these contacts. But the latest such meeting, held on June 15–17
in the Finnish city of Lyakhti, highlighted a disturbing new trend: efforts by
Moscow to cut the Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia off from their Western counterparts.
Such Russian actions not only recall the worst excesses of the Soviet period but
also cast a dark shadow on the future of the Finno-Ugric peoples under Moscow’s
control.
Andrey
Tuomi, a Karelian journalist for Vesti
Karelii, says that as a result of Moscow’s policies and in spite of the
desires of the Finno-Ugric nations in Russia, a yawning “gulf” is opening up
“between the Russian and Western parts of the Finno-Ugric world that was
earlier a single whole.” He argues that this
means that such sessions as the recent congress, as happy as they make all
delegates and observers given the personal contacts they can make, have become
“a dialogue of the deaf with the blind” between “two worlds and two realities.”
Tuomi’s words are a devastating conclusion for someone who has invested so much
of his career to promoting contacts among all Finno-Ugric peoples (Finugor.ru, June 24).
The
three European Finno-Ugric countries were represented at the congress by their
presidents and delegations as large or larger than any they had sent in the
past. Whereas Russia was represented by a deputy minister of culture, Aleksandr
Zhuravsky, and delegations that Moscow reduced the size of in order to ensure they
included more officials and fewer activists.
But it was what Zhuravsky said that provides the clearest indication of
where Moscow is heading in this area.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.