Led by a flag bearer hoisting an image of Jesus, and six drummer
girls in purple satin, about a thousand supporters of various
nationalist causes marched for what they called “Russian May Day” in
northwestern Moscow on May 1.
Young and old, men and women shouted, “Russia is for Russians,”
“Glory to the Russians,” and angrier slogans, such as “get out, black
dirt” – a reference to migrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus.
Indeed, it was migration that seemed to unite this broad swath of rightwing Russia.
Organizers from the Slavic Union and the Russian Ethno-Political Alliance,
among others, called for the gathering – an alternative to the larger
May Day rally on Red Square – to protest a new law that should ease Russian citizenship rules for people from Central Asia and the Caucasus.
“Russian citizenship for Russians. No to handing out citizenship,” some chanted. “Who are we? Russians! We are the power here!”
Several of the groups also yelled, “Cancel 282” – that is, Article
282 of the criminal code, which prohibits inciting ethnic hatred. Each
of about 10 groups had its own flag, including a
black-yellow-and-white-striped banner used briefly by Tsarist Russia in
the 19th century. Other banners incorporated white power symbols. (The kolovrat,
seen in several images above on a red flag, is sometimes called the
Slavic swastika. Adopted by some rightwing groups, others defend it as
an ancient pagan symbol for the sun.)
But some participants called on Russians for self-improvement: “A
strong motherland and healthy nation is the basis of national security.
Russians, stop drinking, stop using drugs, do sports. Glory to Russia,”
one group recited.
At times, some attendees appeared to mock Russian President Vladimir
Putin, but organizers tried to calm troublemakers, mindful, no doubt, of
the hundreds of police, some in riot gear, deployed along the
procession route.
Putin also had his fans: Some, calling for Russia to annex eastern
Ukraine, praised the Russian president for seizing Crimea in March and
named cities in Ukraine that “are Russian,” including the capital,
Kiev.
At least one group bellowed, repeatedly, “national socialism,” in a
chilling refrain that could embarrass Russian officials trying to paint
Ukraine’s revolutionary government as a hotbed of fascism. The paradox
was not lost on one elderly lady sitting at a bus stop, who murmured to a
friend: "They [the government] say fascists are taking over Ukraine,
but look right here. In Moscow. I just don't understand."
Violent xenophobia has risen in recent years as millions of migrants,
many from the Caucasus and Central Asia, flood into Russia to take
low-paying jobs in construction and the service industry. Moscow’s
streets are normally a kaleidoscope of ethnicities representing most of
the former Soviet republics and beyond.
Unsurprisingly, minorities made themselves scarce during the march up
Marshal Biryuzov Street today. But afterward, it was Central Asian men
dismantling the police barricades and cleaning up the trash. A Kyrgyz
woman watching the procession from the sandwich shop where she works
said she had no comment, and then, assured she was speaking to a
foreigner, said the people marching terrified her.
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