The hectic
discussion over the Kashmir meeting in Delhi in October [2010] entitled ‘Azadi
– The Only Way’ has made it urgent to revisit the debate between Lenin and
Luxemburg on the right of nations to self-determination. Lenin, starting from
his experience in imperialist Russia, insisted on the right of nations like the
Ukraine to self-determination (in the sense of their right to form separate
states), contending that denial of this right would merely strengthen Great
Russian nationalism. In a colonial situation, Lenin was surely right. When a
country is under foreign occupation, all sections other than a very small
number of collaborators want to be free of the occupiers, even if there are
sharp differences between these sections. A striking example is RAWA (the
Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan) which, despite speaking
for a section of the population which is sorely oppressed by the Taliban, and
continuing to fight against it, nonetheless shares with the latter the goal of
ending the occupation by US and NATO forces. In such situations, the right of
an occupied nation to self-determination makes sense.
So why did
Rosa Luxemburg reject the whole notion so passionately? Her question was: Who
embodies or represents the ‘nation’, given that it consists of groups that are
often at loggerheads with one another? ‘The “nation” should have the “right” to
self-determination. But who is that “nation” and who has the authority and the
“right” to speak for the “nation” and express its will? How can we find out
what the “nation” actually wants?’ she asks (Luxemburg 1909). This is surely a
valid question where the territory claimed by those who speak for the
nation-to-be is shared by others (who may be a minority or even the majority)
who do not want to be part of that vision. In such situations, more complex
than the clearcut opposition between an imperial power and a colony,
Luxemburg’s question needs to be taken seriously.