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Outrage at
“Fake” Circassian Anniversary
Events of hundreds of years ago become a live political issue as Moscow-sponsored
festivities are dismissed as an attempt to rewite history.
By Marina Marshenkulova in Nalchik and Azamat Bram in Maikop (CRS No.
413, 05-Oct-07)
A 16th century treaty said to mark the moment the Circassian people came
under Russian rule has been marked with lavish official celebrations in the
North Caucasus, but it has angered many Circassians, who say the festivities
are a travesty of history.
In September, the three autonomous republics that have Circassian
populations - Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachai-Cherkessia and Adygeia – staged
public events to celebrate the "450th anniversary of the Circassian nation's
voluntary accession to Russia".
The event being marked took place in 1557, when an alliance was concluded
between Kabardin prince Temruk Idarov and Tsar Ivan the Terrible. The deal
was sealed when the tsar married the prince's daughter Goshevnai.
Moscow has allocated large sums for the festivities - Kabardino-Balkaria got
600 million roubles (about 24 million US dollars) for events, new buildings
and roads repairs, while Adygeia received 200 million roubles.
Over three days of celebrations, Kabardino-Balkaria’s capital Nalchik staged
concerts and exhibitions, a new theatre was opened, and the president and
his team met the people.
In Adygeia and Karachai-Cherkessia, the festivities were more modest.
Adygeia’s president Aslan Tkahkushinov conceded that the date was somewhat
controversial, but described the dispute as "insignificant".
"The winners write history, and we shouldn’t keep looking back as we move
forward,” he said. “There is a need for historical truth, but we should be
making new history. This will be a wonderful holiday embodying the
friendship between the Adygs [Circassians] and the Russians. We will
reaffirm that we are with Russia forever.”
Circassian historians and activists say that singling out this one moment in
history ignores much more important intervening events – specifically,
imperial Russia’s colonial wars against the Circassians. They argue that
what is being portrayed as an act of union was in fact a one-off pact
between two individual leaders, within a broader history of hostility
between their two nations, culminating in the Caucasian wars of the 19th
century.
"Lies can hardly be a firm basis for friendship," said Alia Tliapa, head of
the nationalist Adyge Khase movement in the town of Adygeisk.
"If the events of 450 years ago are regarded as voluntary accession, this
means that the Russian-Caucasian war was not a war of liberation, but a
rebellion against the tsar; and that the Russian troops' actions in the
Caucasus were a kind of anti-terrorist operation to suppress a rebellion on
their own territory," said Tliapa.
The idea of celebrating "voluntary accession" to Russia harks back to the
Soviet era. In 1957 the “400th anniversary” was celebrated in style in
Adygeia and a monument called "Forever with Russia" was erected on the main
square of the local capital Maikop.
In the Yeltsin era following the end of the Soviet Union, this kind of
historical interpretation – that non-Russian groups happily joined the
empire, rather than being conquered - went out of fashion.
In 1996, academics from Adygeia and Moscow held a meeting at which they
concluded that the 1557 treaty was nothing but a temporary union between two
equal parties.
The decision to celebrate the anniversary – and by implication go back to
the older view of history – was taken last year, and sanctioned by Russian
president Vladimir Putin. It coincided with a campaign by Circassian
organisations for the killings and deportations that marked the end of the
19th century war to be recognised as “genocide”.
Circassian groups are also angry that the way the 2014 Winter Olympics in
Sochi are being advertised has written them out of history as the area’s
original inhabitants.
"The celebration of the 'voluntary accession of Circassia to Russia' is
supposed to erase the truth about the genocide of an indigenous people in
the Caucasus - the Circassians - by the Russian state," said Murat Berzegov,
the leader of Adygeia's Circassian Congress. "The fact that the authorities
have reverted to the myths of Soviet times indicates that they have lost
their way and are not prepared to address the issues we have."
He concluded, “The best foundation for strengthening friendship between
nations would be recognition of the Circassian genocide as a historical
truth, and rehabilitation for a nation that has suffered so much on its own
lands.”
In May, the Circassian Congress held a rally in Adygeia to mark the day that
Circassians commemorate those who died in the Caucasian war, and called for
the “accession” celebrations to refer instead to a "military and political
union" between Russia and the Circassian people. By way of compromise, the
local authorities offered to use the word “union” more frequently than
“voluntary accession”.
In Kabardino-Balkaria, things were further complicated by a boycott by the
Balkar people, who give the republic the other half of its double-barrelled
name. Balkar representatives argued that they joined Russia 180 years ago,
and proceeded to hold their own celebrations in May this year.
Local politicians have sought to play down the controversy. "It doesn’t
matter who joined Russia or when,” said Fuad Yefendiev, a member of
parliament in Kabardino-Balkaria. “We’re all citizens of the same country,
and only when we climb out of our national costume will there be peace and
harmony."
Marina Marshenkulova is a correspondent for Sovetskaya Molodezh newspaper
in Kabardino-Balkaria. Azamat Bram is the pseudonym of a freelance
journalist.
Source:
Institute for War & Peace Reporting, Caucasus Reporting Service
Circassians Press Genocide Claims
By Marina Marshenkulova in Nalchik (CRS No. 395 07-Jun-07)
IWPR
Russia:
Imperial Anniversary Challenged In North Caucasus
By
Liz Fuller, September 27, 2007 (RFE/RL)
Dozens March in
New York City for Circassian Recognition & Issues
By Katia Tokhtamish, October 5, 2007

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