How They See ThemselvesNationalism and Identity
- Preambul
- How They See Themselves
- How They See Others
- Forewarned
Preambul
The population of Russia is 149 million (124 million Russians + 25 million others); and there are 5 million Finns; 1½ million Estonians; 1¾ million Latvians (+ 1 million Russians); 3¾ million Lithuanians; 38 million Poles; 39 million Ukrainians (+ 13 million Russians); 7 million Kazakhs (+ 6 million Russians and 4 million others); 2 million Mongolians; 268 million Americans, and over a billion Chinese.
How They See Themselves
The Russian attitude to themselves is summed up in one of their many pithy, earthy proverbs: "My country may be a smelly dungheap - but it's my smelly dungheap."
Although they despair of anything ever turning out right, the Russians firmly believe that, as a nation, they are destined to save the world. This is nothing whatever to do with the Revolution. This is something they have believed since the 16th-century monk, Filofei, described Moscow as "the third Rome, and there will be no fourth".
The Russians would like to be seen above all as being capable of running things smoothly while keeping their personal dignity intact. "The trouble with us is that we all have a serf mentality," Moscow intellectuals frequently muse. The playwright Chekhov talked of his lifelong struggle to "squeeze the slave out of my soul". This is sometimes misread by people in a hurry as "squeeze the SLAV out of my soul" - impossible and undesirable, of course.
The Russians think of themselves as expansive, generous, open-minded, peace-loving and sincere. When the old Communist regime fell in August 1991 and the files were opened, they were genuinely amazed to discover that the Red Army really did have plans for invading Western Europe.
They will occasionally adopt a jocular, dismissive tone about themselves to test a stranger's attitude to them. One should not be taken in by this. They run themselves down but get angry if others criticise their shortcomings.
On the negative side, they recognise that they are lazy and not inclined to look ahead or foresee the consequences of their actions. Like Dickens' Mr. Micawber, there is a national inclination to rely on "something turning up". Their leaders were still boasting that not a single German jackboot would ever touch Russian soil when divisions of the German army were already hundreds of miles inside the Russian border, within striking distance of Minsk, Kiev and St.Petersburg.
Date: 2016-04-22; view: 766
|