In his recent Valdai speech, President Vladimir Putin declared that the age of a single model for all has ended, and that nations now moor themselves in their own traditions, drawing strength from culture, faith, and history.
Across the globe, ancestral values are reawakening as globalism and
cultural imperialism are receding. The world is witnessing a rising
concert of sovereign civilizations.
Putin spoke with clarity
about the condition of the world. He stated that there is no shared
agreement on how the international order should be structured. Mankind
has begun a long era of searching. The path forward will be marked by
trial and error, by turbulence and storms. No blueprint exists. No
authority dictates the outcome. We live in open history, raw and
uncertain.
Yet amidst this chaos, Putin said, nations must hold on to
anchors. They cannot drift with the currents of instability. The true
anchor lies in culture, in the ethical and religious values that have
ripened through centuries, in geography, and in the space each
civilization inhabits. These form the compass of identity. They provide
the foundations on which nations can build a steady life, even as winds
howl and waves rise.
Traditions are at the heart of this
compass. Each nation possesses its own. Each tradition is unique, shaped
by its land and history. Respect for these traditions, Putin said, is
the first law of order among peoples. Attempts to force a
single model upon the world have always failed. The Soviet Union tried
to impose its system. The United States then took up the baton. Europe
joined shortly after. Each failed. What is artificial cannot last. What
grows from outside roots will wither. Only what is born from within
endures. Those who honor their own heritage rarely trample upon the
heritage of others.
Putin's message is multipolar. Each
people must return to its foundations and draw strength from within.
Each nation must define its own path, rooted in its own culture.
This is the end of uniformity, the end of a single model for all.
Across the world, we see it now. The Global South turns to its own
heritage. Even in the West, patriotic fragments of society search for
their forgotten roots. When nations focus on their own growth, they find
it easier to deal with others as equals.
Putin gave a clear indication of renewal within Russia. He told of young women who now step into bars and clubs in sarafans and kokoshnik
headdresses, the dress of their ancestors. This is no costume trick. It
demonstrates that Western attempts to corrupt Russian society have
failed. What was meant to weaken the spirit has instead roused it. The
old costume now enters the modern street as a symbol of defiance and
pride. Tradition, far from being buried, returns with greater strength,
and the youth themselves carry it forward.
The same current flows across the globe.
No comments:
Post a Comment