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Belarus and the “Belarusian Irredenta” in Lithuania*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Stephen R. Burant*
Affiliation:
U.S. Department of State, USA

Extract

On 24 February 1992, Belarusian foreign minister Piotr Kraǔchanka told a visiting European Community delegation in Minsk that he wanted to record his country's claim to Lithuanian border territory in the presence of an international audience. When asked whether the claims extended to Vilnius, Kraǔchanka said “yes,” but added that the border areas were really the ones at issue. In the late 1980s and early 1990s many Lithuanian officials expected Poland to make such claims on their country, to regain territory lost in 1939. By contrast Lithuanians paid little attention to what Belarusians were saying about the role of Vilnius in Belarusian history and the national identity of the 258,000 Slavs in the Vilnius region.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1997 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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References

Notes

* The views expressed herein are those of the author alone and do not necessarily represent those of the U.S. government. I would like to thank Roxane D. V. Sismanidis for her help and encouragement.Google Scholar

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23. Such assertions have parallels in other times and places. Lithuanians in the immediate post-World War I period sought a large national state: acknowledging Lithuanian ethnographic territory did not coincide with the territory they claimed but arguing that people inhabiting this territory had once spoken Lithuanian and that their descendents, even if they did not consider themselves Lithuanians, would return to their roots, once united with their Lithuanian-speaking brethren. Žepkaitė, Regina, Diplomatija imperializmo tarnyboje. Lietuvos ir Lenkijos santykiai 1919–1939m (Vilnius: Mokslas, 1980), pp. 1819; and Wielhorski, Władysław, Polska a Litwa: Stosunki wzaiemne w biegu dziejc/w (London: The Polish Research Centre Ltd., 1947), pp. 254–255. Eric Hobsbawm also writes of so-called Wasserpolacken in Silesia and the Windische in Slovenia who refused to accept political unity with Poles and Slovenes respectively. Hobsbawm, E. J., Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Proramme, Myth, Reality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), p. 59.Google Scholar

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29. Quoted in Basta, Alicja, Zamȩt pod Ostra̧ Brama̧ (Warsaw: Alma Press, 1991), pp. 124125. Numerous Lithuanians believe the Poles of the Vilnius region are denationalized Lithuanians—tutejsi, people who have a regional, rather than a national, identity. See Burant, Stephen R., “Polish-Lithuanian Relations: Past, Present, and Future,” Problems of Communism, May–June 1991, p. 79.Google Scholar

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35. Paz'niak, “Belarus', Rasiia, SND.” Belarusian national activists raised the idea of reconstituting the Grand Duchy under German auspices with Lithuanian, Polish, and Jewish representatives during World War I, and on 12 March 1919, the Lithuanian and Belarusian soviet republics united in the short-lived “Litbel.”Google Scholar

36. Landsbergis, Vytautas, “Baltarusija kryžkelėje,” Lietuvos Aidas, 14 April 1993; Czech, Mirosław, “Polska i Ukraina—działanie i rozmowy,” Kultura, April 1993, p. 94.Google Scholar

37. Lithuanians in the early twentieth century premised their claims to Vilnius on similar grounds. Such arguments are no less dubious than those of the Belarusians. See Žepkaitė, , Diplomatija imperializmo tarnyboje, p. 18.Google Scholar

38. Abramauskas, et al., “Kreipimasis.” They rest their arguments on the mid-ninteenth century research of N. Lebedkin and confirm them by Polish investigations of the period.Google Scholar

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44. Błaszczyk, , Litwa współczesna, p. 323.Google Scholar

45. Ibid.; Kurzowa, , “Sytuacja jȩzykowa,” p. 12.Google Scholar

46. Błaszczyk, , Litwa współczesna, p. 328.Google Scholar

47. Basta, Zamȩt pod Ostra̧ Brama̧, p. 93.Google Scholar

48. Ibid., p. 139.Google Scholar

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52. Cited in Lakis, Juozas, “Przegla̧d socjologiczny pod ka̧tem mniejszości narodowych na Litwie,” Znad Wilii, 29 March–11 April 1992.Google Scholar

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54. Cited in Paradowska, Janina, “Smutki znad Wilii,” Polityka, 31 July 1993.Google Scholar

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58. John A. Armstrong has written that “groups tend to define themselves not by reference to their own characteristics but by exclusion, that is, by comparison to ‘strangers',” Nations Before Nationalism (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1982), pp. 45. On the numerous conflicts between the Polish population and the Lithuanian government, see Burant, Stephen R., “International Relations in a Regional Context: Poland and Its Eastern Neighbors—Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine,” Europe–Asia Studies, May–June 1993, pp. 401–404.Google Scholar

59. Borkowicz, Jacek, “Renesans polskiego s;a015owa,” Gazeta Wvborcza, 4 July 1990.Google Scholar

60. Błaszczyk, , Litwa współczesna, p. 224.Google Scholar

61. Jesswein, Rafał and Kapica, Jacek, “Polskie radio w Wilnie,” Rzeczpospolita, 20 July 1992.Google Scholar

62. Dubavets, Sergei, “Belorusskaia gazeta iz Vil'niusa,” Sovetskaia Belorussiia, 16 May 1992.Google Scholar

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64. Ieškome to, kas mus vienija. Julijos Mockevičiūtės pokalbis su Vaclavu Baranovskiu,” Tiesa, 8 November 1991.Google Scholar

65. There are plans to create a Belarusian-language school in Vilnius. Sponsored by the department of Belarusian language, literature, and culture of the Vilnius Pedagogical Institute, it will offer instruction in grades 1–12. Petkovich, G., “Vozrozhdaetsia Belorusskaia gimnaziia v Vil'niuse,” Ekho Litvy, 31 March 1993.Google Scholar

66. Błaszczyk, , Litwa współczesna, pp. 336339.Google Scholar

67. Mozhno li upustit’ sluchai poradovat'sia drug drugu?Ekho Litvy, 6 January 1993.Google Scholar

68. See, for example, Goliński, Cezary, “Kościuszko polskim imperialista̧ był,” Gazeta Wyborcza, 13 October 1993.Google Scholar