Is Belarus less European than France?
The gold medal is undoubtedly held by the European Commissioner for the Internal Market, Thierry Breton, who declared that Belarus was not Europe and negotiations with Putin would take into account the nature of Belarus. Unsurprisingly, this statement does not sit well with Poland and the Baltic States. Small wonder that the French can be perceived as unbearable among their European partners; arrogance can be taken just a step too far.
Therefore, it is quite legitimate to pose the following questions: “What makes France more European than Belarus? Or Belarus less European than France? History? Culture? Population? Geography? Alphabet? Let’s consider each in turn.
It is undeniable that France has played a central role in European history. Along with Spain and England, it was one of the first three modern European kingdoms to take shape, while Belarus lacked stable borders and was basically stripped of independent status and forcibly incorporated into large princedoms, kingdoms and empires: The Great Duchy of Lithuania, Poland, Austria, the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. The inhabitants of this area have been identified through history as Rus (a mixture of Scandinavians and Slavs), then Litvins, Ruthenians, White Ruthenians, White Russians to eventually coming to be known as Belarusians.
It was not until March 25th 1918 that the first Belarusian Republic was created. As with its neighbour Ukraine, the Belarusian independent state lasted only several months and the following year was incorporated by the Bolsheviks into the Soviet Union as a Soviet Republic. Belarusians had to wait for the dissolution of the USSR in 1991 to regain their sovereignty. Like the Russians, Belarusians in the East experienced absolute monarchy under the tsars, Leninism, Stalinism, the post-war apparatchiks’ regime but, unlike the Russians, their ancestors did not suffer for centuries from the Mongolian yoke, which left an indelible mark on the Russian political system. As for Western Belarusians, they partly escaped from Bolshevik totalitarianism and Stalinist purges because their land was under Polish administration during the inter-war period.
It is important to point out that Belarusians have been influenced (and still are today) by both Lithuanian and Polish cultures. For many centuries, Belarusians had been of Catholic or Greek Catholic faith; the first book published in Belarusian was a bible, in 1517. However, unlike Ukrainians, they failed to maintain their religion due to harsh restrictions under the tsarist regime.
Thus, Belarus has not been created from scratch by obscure bureaucrats – as happened recently with certain French regions such as Pays-de-la-Loire. Belarus (бела | ‘bela’ means ‘white’ in Belarusian) has centuries-old cultural roots with a history more along the lines of Finland or Belgium, although Belarusians remain more homogeneous than Belgians or Finns.
If we defined Europe by its Indo-European settlements and by its Judeo-Christian culture, Belarus might actually be more European than a multicultural France whose most practised religion may well be – according to some writers in Le Figaro – Sunni Islam[2], Catholicism being in free fall. Could it be that the European Union has effectively excluded Turkey because of its Muslim culture, although officially it has been secular for the last 75 years?
Geographically, Britain’s departure from the European Union places France somewhat on the periphery of Europe. Belarus would be closer to Mitteleuropa than France; Brest in France being twice as far from Berlin as Brest in Belarus[3].
Let’s now turn our attention to the remaining issue of the alphabet. Mr Thierry Breton must certainly have thought the use of the Cyrillic alphabet reason enough to exclude Belarus from Europe and to doom Belarusians to Russian control for evermore. Serbs and Montenegrins are now tending to abandon Cyrillic letters for Latin script in order to move closer to the west. Bulgaria being an exception. Are we yet again witnessing a Roman victory over Byzantium?
Unlike with Ukrainians, the Belarusian opposition, represented by three courageous young women, is not asking for association with the European Union. (If there hadn’t been massive fraud – there is even talk of a reversal of the election results – we would have seen a woman president, which has never yet happened in the entire history of France.) Belarusian citizens have demonstrated massively and peacefully every week for the democratic right to have their vote counted and validated. Surely each nation has the right to self-determination.
Excluding Belarus from Europe and abandoning this sovereign nation to a state of vassalage under an authoritarian and aggressive power[4] is despicable, especially from a leader representing a pan-European institution whose motto is “United in diversity”.
Edited by Annie Clein, form-idea.com London, 19th October 2020 | As well published in Euromaidan Press
Author’s notes
[2] ‘The one and indivisible’ French Republic forbids statistics on religion or ethnic origins, so that no form of distinction or discrimination between its citizens is possible (theoretically). Nevertheless, one thing people have noticed is that on Fridays French mosques are full of worshippers, while French Catholic churches remain almost empty on Sundays.
[3] Brest (France) is located 1588km from Berlin while Brest in Belarus is only 776km away. As for the capitals, Berlin is located halfway between Paris and Minsk.
[4] The Kremlin is already concerned with social unrest and discontent in Khabarovsk, Eastern Russia. Any democratic movement within the two countries considered as “Slavic brothers” (Ukraine and Belarus) is seen as a threat to Putin’s regime. Ukrainian and Belarusian visitors or migrants could spread new ideas and western values in Russia. Democracy represents to Moscow transparency, accountability, anti-corruption, civil liberties, women’s rights and minority rights including LGBTI.
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Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya | Candidate who would have won the presidential elections of August 9th, 2020.


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