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The Nationalities Question in the Soviet Union PDF

404 Pages·1991·20.325 MB·English
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NATIONALITIES Mri I m' . .. .. G R A IT A M SMITH ■ » I The Nationalities Question in the Soviet Union edited by GRAHAM SMITH Hope College Holland. Michigan Longman Group UK Limited, Longman House, Burnt Mill, Harlow, Essex CM20 2JE, England and Associated Companies throughout the world. Published in the United States of America by Longman Publishing Group, New York © Longman Group UK Limited 1990 All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the Publishers or a licence permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W1P 9HE. First published 1990 Second Impression 1991 Third Impression 1992 British Library Cataloguing In Publication Data The Nationalities question in the Soviet Union 1. Soviet Union, Nationalities, Political aspects I. Smith, Graham 323.147 ( ISBN 0-5A2-D3T53-3 ISBN 0-5A2-[]3T55-Xpbk Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data The Nationalities question in the Soviet Union/edited by Graham Smith. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-582-03953-3 : £28.00. — ISBN 0-582-03955-X (pbk.): £14.95 1. Soviet Union—Politics and government—1985-2. Nationalism- -Soviet Union. 3. Perestroika. I. Smith, Graham, 1953— DK288.N37 1990 320.947—dc20 90-34756 CIP The cover illustration is adapted from an idea seen in a cartoon in PWA, a Polish samizdat magazine, issue number 40, 2nd December 1988. Set in 11/12 Garamond Produced by Longman Singapore Publishers (Pte) Ltd. Printed in Singapore / Contents Preface v List of Maps vjj List of Contributors Chapter one Nationalities Policy from Lenin to Gorbachev, Graham Smith j Chapter two The Russians: the Dominant Nationality, Simon Dixon 21 PART I: THE BALTIC REPUBLICS Chapter three Estonians, Riina Kionka 40 Chapter four Latvians, Graham Smith 54 Chapter five Lithuanians, V. Stanley Vardys 72 PART II: THE SOUTH-WESTERN BORDERLANDS Chapter six Ukrainians, Peter J.S. Duncan 95 Chapter seven Belorussians, Ralph S. Clem 109 Chapter eight Moldavians, Jonathan Eyal 123 PART III: TRANSCAUCASIA Chapter nine Armenians, Edmund M. Llerzig 146 Chapter ten Azerbaijanis, Tamara Dragadze 163 Chapter eleven Georgians, Robert Parsons 180 PART IV: MUSLIM CENTRAL ASIA Chapter twelve Kazakhs, Ingvar Svanherg 199 Chapter thirteen Uzbeks, Shir in Akiner 214 Chapter fourteen Turkmen, Annette Bohr 228 iii CONTENTS 246 Chapter fifteen Kirgiz, Simon Crisp 259 Chapter sixteen Tadzhiks, John Payne PART V: NON-RUSSIANS OF THE RUSSIAN REPUBLIC 277 Chapter seventeen Volga Tatars, Marie Benmgsen Broxup 290 Chapter eighteen Buryats, Caroline Humphrey 304 Chapter nineteen Yakut, Piers Vitehsky PART VI: THE DIASPORA NATIONALITIES 322 Chapter twenty Crimean Tatars, Edward J. Lazzerim 339 Chapter twenty-one Jews, Yoram Gorlizki APPENDIX 1: Territorial and ethnic claims in the 360 Soviet Union APPENDIX 2: Comparative tables for the major nationalities 362 Select bibliographic guide to further reading in the English language 373 379 Index IV Preface The idea for this book originated during the spring of 1988 when it was clear that Gorbachev’s reforms were in the process of opening up a Pandora’s box of ethnic problems which hitherto had remained largely hidden beneath the surface of Soviet politics. Since February 1988, when the Nagorno-Karabakh Soviet took the unprecedented step of calling for their region’s transfer to the neighbouring Soviet republic of Armenia, the paroxysm of ethnic and nationalist unrest has continued unabated, embracing the traditionally assertive nationalities, like the Baltic peoples and Georgians, as well as the hitherto most loyal, such as the Belorussians and Moldavians. Such developments, more or less overnight, have made an important but comparatively neglected area of Soviet studies - that of the na¬ tionalities question - not only topical but also in need of reappraisal. The aim of this book is therefore to provide a systematic analysis of the Soviet Union’s major nationalities in the light of the new circumstances in which they now find themselves. The dramatic changes affecting the world’s largest multi-ethnic society are clearly complex and multi-faceted. By bringing together a large group of contributors with expertise on particular nationalities it is hoped that this book will illustrate to the reader the often strikingly different ways in which the nationalities have been affected by and responded to perestroika and glasnost’. According to official sources, there are 140 nationalities in the Soviet Union. Although this book only deals with twenty of them, in total they constitute over nine-tenths of the Soviet population. They include the fifteen union republic nationalities which make up the top tier of the federal structure, together with the Volga Tatars, Buryats and Yakut of the Russian republic, and the Crimean Tatars and Jews (Figure 1). The book is structured as follows. Chapter One provides an historical overview of Soviet nationalities policy, thus enabling Gorbachev’s poli¬ cies to be located within an appropriate context. Due to their special position within Soviet society and politics, the Russians are singled out PREFACE for particular treatment in the second chapter. The remaining chapters on the minority nationalities are divided into six parts, largely by regional - administrative groupings, with each part being prefaced by a brief introduction. An appendix of statistical tables on the nationalities is also included for general reference, and wherever possible, includes preliminary data published from the 1989 Soviet census. In order to ensure continuity and the book’s overall coherence, each contributor has followed a similar format. Chapters begin by briefly locating the nationality within an historical, geopolitical and cultural context. Next, the nationality is dealt with as part of the Soviet Union, paying particular attention to socio-economic, cultural and political developments, and to relations with Moscow. Each chapter then focuses on analysing developments since Gorbachev came to power, with particular attention being paid to such common themes as the impact of the reforms on national cultures and local economies, the role of native leaders in relation to such changes, issues pertinent to fuelling ethnic and territorial demands, and the emergence of new nationalist organisations and other forms of ethno-cultural resurgence. Needless to say, events continue to move fast in the Soviet Union not least due to the nationalities question. Every attempt has therefore been made to provide as up-to-date and analytically useful an examination as possible. The major acknowledgement which an editor of a volume such as this needs to make is to the contributors. All of them responded with enthusiasm to the project, and I am particularly grateful for their willingness to follow editorial guidelines, which, we hope, provide the coherence in approach and balance in coverage that was intended. I should also like to thank Longman’s editor, Chris Harrison, for his encouragement, interest and support and for his willingness to allow the project to expand beyond the initially intended coverage. To Maria Constantinou I am grateful for her secretarial help and to Ian Agnew for his cartographic work. GRAHAM SMITH Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge May 1990 vi List of Maps Figure 1: The Soviet Federation Figure 2: Transcaucasia Figure 3: Ethnic and Linguistic Minorities in Tadzhikistan List of Contributors Shirin Akiner, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Annette Bohr, Research Section, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Munich. Marie Broxup, Society for Central Asian Studies, London. Ralph Clem, Department of International Relations, Flprida International University. Simon Crisp, St Catherine’s College, Oxford. Simon Dixon, Department of Modern History, University of Glasgow. Tamara Dragadze, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Peter Duncan, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London. Jonathan Eyal, Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies, London. Yoram Gorlizki, St Antony’s College, Oxford. Edmund Herzig, Department of Middle Eastern Studies, University of Manchester. Caroline Humphrey, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge. Riina Kionka, Research Section, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Munich. Edward Lazzerini, Department of History, University of New Orleans. Robert Parsons, BBC Russian World Service, London. John Payne, Department of Linguistics, University of Manchester. Graham Smith, Department of Geography, University of Cambridge. Ingvar Svanberg, Centre for Multi-ethnic Research, Uppsala University. V. Stanley Vardys, Department of Political Science, University of Oklahoma. Piers Vitebsky, Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge. vm

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