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Nationalism In The Baltics And The Politics (стр. 2 из 2)

powers including at one time or another in their histories by Poland, Germany,

Sweden and Russia. All of these periods of occupation with practices of

genocide under the Nazis, massive exiles of the native populations and Russian

colonization during the Soviet period?

have left an indelible imprint on these nations.? Indigenous cultures that have survived or

preserved an identity have done so essentially?

as peasant cultures, very much distinct from the cultures of the

masters. In a curious way, the masters or ruling classes in the Baltics have

always been foreigners who preserved their own traditions and language over

centuries. In the present post Soviet?

period with the re-assertion of sovereignty and the rise of nationalism,

the question arises for the Baltics: ?How far can we assert our national

identities without violating basic rights of our ?immigrant? minority ethnic

groups??? David Miller for one has

argued for limiting rights our immigrant groups which threaten national

stability.? He writes: (In? the) circumstance where the immigrant group

is strong and cohesive enough to?????

constitute itself as an independent nation ..(perhaps as a result of )

having been expelled from some other place ? the receiving nation may have good

reason to guard itself against being turned into bi-national society,

particularily where it forces deep conflicts between the two people.[16]? In

defending cultural nationalism, we are not arguing against immigration, nor are

we arguing for a static ethnic sense of national identity into which the

immigrant must be assimilated with a total loss of his/her previous ethnic or

national identity. We are arguing for a gradual integration ?according to the

absorptive capacities of the nation in question?. The process of integrating

the immigrant is not a one-way street where the immigrant simply acquires a new

cultural identity, but a process where the national identity itself is in

constant but gradual flux.???? Nationalism

in a multicultural setting should present itself under icons or national

symbols that are not offensive to minorities and can be comprehensively adopted

by all members of the society.? National

identity must be defined as far as possible ?independent of group-specific

values?. Although complete cultural neutrality is not feasible in practice

since ?a national language is the bearer of the culture of the people whose

language it originally was?[17],

the nation should present itself in a way which is culturally innocuous to the

minorities. ?Remove the prejudice? which is inherent in an ethnic conception of

the nation, and ?ensure that each group is shown? equal respect and the reluctance to share in a common culture

will evaporate?[18] suggests

Miller. Let me

provide an account of the situation in?

Canada, which like the Baltics, has also encountered linguistic and

cultural barriers to forming a strong union. In Canada differences exist among

the founding peoples, the French and the English, the indigenous people and the

more recent immigrant communities. Canada in the recent past has striven to

present itself and its symbolic image of itself in culturally neutral terms,

incorporating or acknowledging the divergent cultural or ethnic entities that

constitute it. It acknowledges the roots of its founding people? –?

the French, the English, and of course, the Indigenous Peoples in the

phrase, ?the founding nations of Canada?.?

One step in creating an image of Canada around which nationhood or

nationality may be defined is in terms of its overt public symbols. Symbols

which may have stood for colonialism and repression in the past have been

replaced; e.g., the old Canadian flag (a version of the Union Jack) has been

replaced by the Maple Leaf flag which is neutral to all parties, the previous national

anthem ?God Save the King/Queen? by the unifying anthem ?O Canada?.? Our history, another factor on which a

nation can divide, in the past was presented in a light that saw the dominant

national group, the English, as the victors in a just struggle and the

minorities, the Native Peoples or the French Canadians were presented as the

vanquished peoples. It is unfortunate that in the past in Canada we operated

with at least two different histories, history?

as taught in French schools in the province of Quebec, and history as it

was taught in English Canada. Events in the 18thcentury such as the

conquests of Quebec and Louisbourg, the Expulsion of the Acadians etc., were

given their own particular slants.? John

Ralston Saul in Reflections of a Siamese Twin

has made a very valuable correction to?

such a divisive account of?

Canadian history. The image of the?

French Canadians as a vanquished or conquered people, a minority which

has been forced to succumb to the will of the masters has stood as a barrier to

the full acceptance of Canadians as one nation.? We recognize that much has been done to remedy the symbols that

define our nation in a way that emphasizes our shared identities; we have

become aggressive in our task of nation building according to principles which

can accommodate our complex history and its diverse cultures and languages. I

think it is, in part from such considerations that our past prime minister,

Pierre Trudeau introduced policies of bilingualism and multiculturalism to

provide for a country in which?? both

the French and English speakers fully belong and with which members of diverse

cultural backgrounds can fully identify. The

official Canadian policy of multiculturalism, although seen by many to be

destructive of an internal cohesiveness, a sense of shared identity,

nonetheless can also be seen as an element in forming a uniquely Canadian

consciousness. I think the Canadian experience, with some qualifications,

should be a model for nation building in the Baltics and elsewhere.? . The

overt symbols of a nation such as the national flag, the anthem, the official

or public history, language, culture that apply to nations with linguistically

and culturally diverse populations should not apply specifically to any one

ethnic group. It may seen that Latvia has failed to observe the need for

neutrality of the symbolic elements on which, in part, national solidarity may

be built. Can one

honestly argue that Latvia represents in a qualified way an acceptable form of

nationalism?? I must begin by confessing

that Latvian policy has not been wise in all its endeavour of nation building.

The fostering of a sense of? national

identity? with which the Russian and

other minorities can readily identify seemingly has not been done. However,

viewed against the historical background of mass deportations and an aggressive

policy of Russification during the occupation period? there is, I think, some understanding and even justification of? the cultural and linguistic policies

followed by the government of Latvia, especially when these policies are seen

as arising through a democratic process, and preserving in general individual

human rights and basic freedoms including a free press and hence ?providing the

conditions under which debate can continue.?[19]

The Russian press in Latvia is very vocal in expressing its grievances in a

public forum, and debate is lively in both formal and informal settings. There

remain, however, divergent readings of past history, particularly as it applies

to WW II.? Latvia does not, and cannot,

subscribe to the Russian view that the forceful incorporation of Latvia into

the Soviet Union was an act of liberation?

since in the case of Latvia and the other Baltic nations the war did not

end in liberation but in replacing one type of enslavement (that of the Nazis)

by that of another (that of the Soviets).?

However, Latvia is very clear in its policy of divorcing itself from

any? aims of the previously occupying? powers. ?Another aspect that should be borne in mind

is that in the case of Latvia it is the Latvian majority which is, in a sense,

the vanquished people who have suffered occupiers for 800 years and whose

culture and language are very much under threat of disappearance. Latvian

speakers total only some 0.5% nearly overwhelmed by its Russia speaking

neighbours. Latvia is preserving a culture which is very much under threat,

whereas the Russians in Latvia have no such fears. They can draw, and indeed do

draw, upon the huge cultural wealth of Russia in the form of newspapers, journals,

books, TV, radio, all of which is available to Russian speakers in Latvia.? Russian is spoken by virtually all residents

of Latvia, in practice, but not in law.?

Latvia is fully bilingual? and

the Russian speaker can be at home any where in the country.? Wherever I have travelled in Latvia I have

not found one incidence where Latvians refused to speak Russian when addressed

by Russian speakers. Indeed, anecdotally, when Russians have approached me and

spoken to me in Russian and I have replied in Latvian (as I do not speak

Russian), they have been very much mystified and somewhat angered by my

response. ?I have attempted to show that there is a

defensible version of nationalism which?

occupies the ground between the ethnic and civic conceptions of the nation.

Our middle ground lies between the one hand, a national identity based on a

(presumed) common ethnicity, culture or ?blood?, and on the other hand, a

national identity based on ?the daily plebiscite?, i. e., on the voluntary

choice of individual men and women to form a union under some doctrine of human

rights and constitutional process.? We

have suggested that there is a basic human need to have an identity within a

cultural milieu, to be identified with a culture and a tradition in which the

sense of self emerges and is reinforced.?

Cultural nationalism represents a social ideal which is consistent with

basic democratic political institutions and a doctrine of human rights. When we

confront an actual historical situation of a particular state, it becomes

manifest that its history will bear upon the form of nationalism which is

appropriate to it and whatever limits need to be imposed on the appropriate

model.? In the case of Canada, the form

of nationalism that we find recognizes the historical reality of its ?founding

nations?, the Indigenous People, the French, and the English, as well as the

diverse groups of immigrants which make up the country.? I have suggested that this form of

nationalism is, and could be, a model for other states.? In the Baltics the situation has been

somewhat different.? They have suffered

through a tumultuous history in the 20th century involving periods

of military occupation, large scale deportations, forced colonization etc .? The form of nationalism that is found there reflects

those historical contingencies. It is with respect to such historical

contingencies that Latvia and the other Baltic states represent in a qualified

form the ideal of cultural nationalism.?

Nootens[20], drawing

upon the work of Will Kymlicka and others, helps us see that problems such as

those that face the Baltics require over and above a purely philosophical

analysis also a disinterested historical context. ????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?Cornelius Kampe ????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?Acadia University (The paper appears in Social

Philosophy Today, Vol. 16,?

pp.66-81) [1]? David Miller, On Nationality (Cambridge: Cambridge

University Press, 1995), 5. [2]? Ibid., 4. [3] Jocelyne Couture, Kai Nielsen and Michel Seymour, Rethinking Nationalism (Calgary,

University of Calgary Press, 1998) [4] Ibid., 7 [5] Andre Van de Putte, ?Democracy and Nationalism? in Rethinking Nationalism, eds. Jocelyne

Couture, Kai Nielsen and Michel Seymour, (Calgary: University of Calgary Press,

1998), 161-195. [6] Ibid., 167. [7] Frans De Wachter, ?In Search of a Post-National Identity: Who are

my People?? Couture, Nielsen and?

Seymour, 197-217. [8] Ibid., 214 [9] Yael Tamir, ?Theoretical Difficulties in the Study of Nationalism?

in Couture, Nielsen and? Seymour, 65-92 [10] Martha Nussbaum, ?Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism? in ed. Joshua

Cohen,? For Love of Country: Debating the Limits of? Patriotism?? (Boston:

Beacon Press, 1996). [11] Miller, 129 [12] Ibid., 129-30. [13] Ibid., 132. [14] Michael Walzer, On Toleration

(New Haven, Yale University Press, 1997), 2-3. [15] Charles Taylor, Multiculturalism

and the ?Politics of Recognition??

ed. Amy Gutmann (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1992), 34. [16] Miller, 129. [17] Ibid., 137. [18] Ibid., 138. [19] Ibid., 128. [20] Genevieve Nootens, ?Liberal Restrictions on Public Arguments: Can

Nationalist Claims be Moral Reasons

in Liberal Discourse?? in Couture, Nielsen and?

Seymour, 237-260. ?

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