Without such sociological and political imagination, we are doomed to constrict the future trajectories along which a society can evolve. But if we allow ourselves to imagine, ideas can inspire and illuminate the pathways required for change.
Zulya was and will likely remain the biggest champion of Tatar music in Australia where she moved in 1991 to start a family. She was born in the Russian republic of Udmurtia, grew up in the neighbouring republic of Tatarstan and lived in Australia since the nineties. First performing at the age of nine, Zulya went on to make 10 solo albums, as well as three more with The Children of the Underground, singing variously in Tatar, Russian and English. Zulya’s songs built on a creative reinterpretation of Tatar music that represented both her Tatar and Australian identities and illustrated how folk melodies can evolve, while continuing to interact with global trends and bridging the gap between different cultures and societies.
Despite having fans around the world, Zulya was paradoxically little known in Russia, outside Tatarstan. The main reason for this curious gap is the persistent ethnic inequalities in Russian society and the racism long ingrained in the identity of ethnic Russians, the predominant ethnic group in the country.
Zulya’s life, live performances and musical legacy all signal the possibility of another future for Russia — a future in which Russia’s multifaceted ethnic and cultural diversity becomes one of the country’s strengths rather than its weakness, as it is perceived to be by the Kremlin today.
I imagine a future for post-imperial Russia in which, rather than invading its neighbours, Russia will treasure, cherish, and develop its ethnic minorities and see the country’s extraordinary diversity as one of its most valuable resources. It is a future for post-energy-transition Russia, in which ethnocultural diversity displaces Russia’s oil and gas with music and other cultural resources and creations exported to the world instead of energy resources. It is a future for post-patriarchal Russia in which women are politically empowered and encouraged by society to take a leading role in creating the country’s future instead of being cajoled and bribed to procreate by a militarist state that needs their children to fight an unjust war.