Title: Culture Wars, Geopolitics, and Belarusian Identity
1Culture Wars, Geopolitics, and Belarusian
Identity
The West has eventually recognized its
helplessness vis-à-vis the Minsk riddle.
Belorussky Rynok 2001
2Little known and cliché-ridden
- A virtual black hole in Europe
- An anomaly in the region
- A modern sultanate
- Mass psychological marasmus (about Lukashenka
supporters) - An authoritarian cesspool
- A bastard of Europe
- An outpost of tyranny
- The last dictatorship of Europe
3Who would believe the last dictator of Europe!
- Lukashenka many damaged areas are now
safe - 2005 Joint Report by IAEA, WHO, and UNDP
radiation level acceptable - Belarus-watchers prior to 2005 Is Belarus
economic growth a hoax or is it real? - Belarus-watchers after 2005 Can Belarus
economic growth be sustained?
4Crux of Belarus specificity as I see it
- Delayed urbanization
- Delayed nation-building
5Svetlana Alexiyevich (2004)
- Belarus is still a country with patriarchal
peasant culture . . .I was asked
why our own Vaclav Havel did not emerge in
Belarus. I replied that we had Ales Adamovich,
but we chose a different man. The point is not
that we have no Havels, we do, but that they are
not called for by society
6(No Transcript)
7Yuri Shevtsovs Perspective
- Belarusian identity is there to comprehend, not
to manifest - The region repeatedly ravaged by wars initiated
by external powers - Following each war, cultural self-identification
of regional political class changed - No cultural form had enough time to crystallize
before being replaced - Only under the Soviets did Belarusian identity
begin to be embraced by local Slavs
8Yury Shevtsov (cont.)
- During the 1940s, Jews and Poles vacated their
social niches - Gates of vertical mobility thrust open for many
Belarusians - Consequently, Belarusians had as much of a heyday
in post-war Soviet Belarus as did Lithuanians,
Latvians, and Estonians during their 1919-1940
independence -
9A split identity disorder?
- Belarusians are inseparable from Russians, and
their greatest shared experience was the Great
Patriotic War of 1941 1945
- Belarusians are descendants of the Great Duchy
of Lithuania and Rzeczpospolita, which waged
numerous wars with despotic Russia
10Could There Be Three National Projects?
- Even two projects are one too many
- Arche Numerous references to Nativist/European,
Muscovite Liberal, and Creole projects
11Project 1 Nativist/Pro-European
- Codified historic narrative (e.g. Ten Centuries
of Belarusian History by Uladzimer Arlou
Genadz Saganovich) - Polatsk Great Duchy Rzeczpospolita
- 1772 1991 Russias colonial domain
- Time to undo Russias oppressive impact
- From switching to Belarusian to clear-cut
identity and then to democratization
12Project 2 Muscovite Liberal
- Aversion to linguistic radicalism
- Reevaluation of ties with Russia
- Belarusian nationalism speaks Russian by Yury
Drakakhrust - Beliefs of the nativist community called into
question - Formation of core constituency
13Project 2 Muscovite Liberal
- Sharing some nativist beliefs but not
anti-Russian sentiment - Why not sign Geneva Convention on culture wars?
- August 2005 polemics about the language of the
Deutsche Welles newscasts for Belarus as a
culture war
14Project 3 Creole
- Creoles speak a mixed language and are patriotic
- Creole is pre-national consciousness
- Uladzimer Abushenka For Creoles, things Russian
no longer belong in we, yet they cant be
assigned to they similar ambiguity typifies
their attitude to things Belarusian - Valer Bulgakau Lukashenka is the president of
Creoles
15Project 3 State Ideology of the
Republic of Belarus
- Historic attachment to Russia
- Role of the Great Patriotic War of 1941 1945
- Communal ethos
- Anti-nationalist sentiment directed squarely
against the nativists - Only in this context can one appreciate reference
to Lukashenka as the main anti-Belarusian
nationalist of Belarus (Feduta 2005)
16Lukashenka at Brest State
University (09. 04)
- Belarus has never ever been part of Western
culture and way of life - To the Catholic-and-Protestant . . .
civilization, Belarus and Belarusians, who are
predominantly Orthodox and for centuries
coexisted in the same political setting with
Russia and Russians, are alien - I am not afraid of saying this in Western
Belarus
17Did Alyaxander Lukashenka Read Samuel Huntington?
- Belarus straddles a civilizational fault line
- Left Huntingtons original map Right
Eberhardts map
18(No Transcript)
19Trans-culturalism for Belarus?
- Ihar Babkou Because Belarus straddles
a cultural divide, it can develop only as a
consciously trans-cultural society - Adam Mickiewicz is a native alien, and Alexander
Lukashenka is an alien native - Synthesis of national projects under civic
nationalism umbrella? - Unless and until this synthesis is accomplished
nation-building morass will linger
20Concluding Remarks
- The assertion that Belarusian identity is there
to comprehend, not to manifest gets demystified - That identity would be manifested as any other,
if only Belarusians knew exactly what to manifest - Much of what is attributed to Lukashenkas
ill-will pertains to Belarusian society - Ten days from now, Lukashenkas victory looks
certain
21Concluding Remarks
- He would win between one-half and 2/3 of the vote
even without rigging the election - What worked elsewhere has not worked in Belarus
and it wont - A more imaginative strategy is overdue as is an
attempt to understand Belarus on its own terms
instead of fitting it into an ideological
template of our own making