The size and distribution of the three related ethnic groups is, moreover,
uneven. While the Kabardians account for more than 55 percent of their
republic's 900,000 population, and the Adygs account for some 25 percent of
the total 447,000 population of the Republic of Adygeya, the Cherkess in
Karachayevo-Cherkessia constitute only a small minority (10-11 percent of a
total population of some 429,000).
In September 2006, Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a series of
presidential edicts "on marking the 450th anniversary of the voluntary
incorporation" into the Russian Empire of the present-day Adygeya,
Karachayevo-Cherkessia, and Kabardino-Balkaria. The formulation "voluntary
incorporation" led some Adygs, Cherkess, and Kabardians to protest that it
constituted a distortion of historical fact in the name of what many critics
perceived as Great Russian chauvinism.
Such skewing of history to conform to and substantiate political dogma,
specifically the myth of friendship and brotherhood among the various
peoples of the USSR, was a prominent component of Soviet communist ideology.
For example, the 200th anniversary of the Treaty of Georgiyevsk, under which
Erekle II, king of eastern Georgia, secured a pledge of Russian protection
against Persia, was widely celebrated in 1983 as a progressive move that
paved the path to eternal friendship between the Russian and Georgian
peoples.
Local critics of Moscow's interpretation of the 1557 pact also noted that in
1864, Tsarist Russia launched a major war to subjugate the North Caucasus in
which hundreds of thousands of Adygs, Cherkess, and Kabardians were either
killed or driven into exile in Turkey and other Near Eastern countries,
where they still have sizeable diasporas. The Adygeya chapter of the
Cherkess Congress has appealed unsuccessfully, first to the Russian State
Duma and then to President Putin, to designate those mass killings as
genocide.
Historical Objections
In November 2006, the public organization Cherkess Congress of the
Kabardino-Balkaria Republic criticized the planned anniversary celebrations
as an attempt to rewrite history and whitewash what the organization's
members termed the genocide of the Cherkess people, AP reported on November
17. Meeting six months later, in May 2007, again in Nalchik, KBR Cherkess
Congress members pledged to launch protests if the planned celebrations took
place as planned in September, according to caucasustimes.com on May 22.
KBR Cherkess Congress leader Ruslan Keshayev explained the Cherkess'
collective objections in an extensive interview with the website kavkaz-uzel.ru
on May 24. Keshayev argued that the marriage of Tsar Ivan the Terrible to
Guashana, the daughter of Kabardian Prince Temryuk Iradov, cemented a "military-political
alliance" between two equal princedoms under which Muscovy undertook to
protect Kabarda in the event of an attack either by the Ottoman Turks or the
Khanate of Crimea, not the "incorporation" of Kabarda into the Russian
Empire.
He drew the comparison between the alliance against Nazi Germany during
World War II between the United States and the USSR, pointing out how
risible it would be to construe that as the incorporation of the former into
the latter state. Keshayev also pointed out that imperial Russian historians
dated the incorporation of Kabarda into the Russian Empire to 1774 and that
of western Cherkessia to 1829, and that the "myth" of the incorporation of
Cherkessia into the Russian Empire in the mid-16th century was an invention
of Soviet historiography.
Adyg intellectuals, meanwhile, appealed to the Russian Academy of Sciences'
Institute of Russian History to give an assessment of the nature of the 1557
pact. The institute duly issued such an assessment, from which kavkaz-uzel.ru
quoted key extracts on September 2, but the evaluation has not been widely
publicized, at least in Adygeya, the website reported on September 12.
Specifically, the Institute of Russian History noted that in the mid-16th
century Tsar Ivan IV "established friendly relations with several Adyg
rulers" who subsequently sent envoys to Moscow requesting assistance against
the khans of Crimea in return for acknowledging Russian overlordship [poddanstvo].
The institute ruled that it would be premature to designate that pact as the
"annexation" by Muscovy of the North Caucasus, given that the borders of
Muscovy at that time were so far to the north. Institute staff further said
they are "inclined to link the final incorporation of the Northeast Caucasus
into the Russian Empire with the end of the Caucasian War of the first half
of the 19th century."
They concluded that "strictly speaking, no annexation or 'voluntary
incorporation' of the Adygs into the Russian Empire took place in the mid-16th
century. In our view, the formulation 'military-political alliance' that
began appearing in regional studies of the Caucasus in recent years reflects
far more accurately the character of Adyg-Russian relations up until the end
of the 18th century, although that formulation is conditional [uslovna] and
requires clarification.... Thus we believe that what happened 450 years ago
was not the annexation of Adygeya by Russia but the establishment of allied
relations between them."
Grounds For Parade
Undeterred by the reservations publicly expressed by some of their
citizens, the leaders of the three republics set about organizing the
appropriate combination of cultural and public-political events. Kabardino-Balkaria
President Arsen Kanokov reportedly opted for a youth parade, concerts of
classical and pop music, displays of fireworks, and a major exhibition
intended to attract investment from other regions of Russia. There were also
horse races, in which a colt named Djasil belonging to pro-Moscow Chechen
Republic head Ramzan Kadyrov won the 450th Anniversary Cup, according to
gazeta.ru on September 9. Also featured was the formal unveiling of a
monument to Kanokov's predecessor Valery Kokov, who died of cancer in the
fall of 2005 weeks after leaving office, and who left behind a legacy of
corruption and religious repression.
The entire three days of celebration proceeded under the rubric "With Russia
forever." In his formal anniversary address, however, Kanokov implicitly
acknowledged the divergence of views over the anniversary, affirming that
however one chose to construe the 1557 pact, "it was the correct move," and
one thanks to which "the peoples of Kabardino-Balkaria managed to preserve
their identity and culture," the daily "Kommersant" reported.
The KBR Cherkess Congress issued a statement on September 7 in which it
again challenged the Kremlin's interpretation of the 1557 alliance and
reaffirmed that the pact was a "military-political alliance" between "two
equal subjects of international law," kavkaz-uzel.ru reported. At the same
time, the congress stated that in light of efforts in recent years by "destructive
forces" to foment "destabilization" in the KBR, it would abstain from the
protests it had originally planned to coincide with the official celebration.
Meanwhile, the republic's Balkar minority too expressed diverging views of
the anniversary celebration. Retired General Supyan Beppayev, who heads the
pro-Kremlin organization Alan, told journalists in Nalchik on August 29 that
the Balkars "should and will" participate in the anniversary celebrations,
caucasustimes.com reported on August 30. But Oyus Gurtuyev of the Council of
Elders of the Balkar People, a political organization that has strained
relations with the republic's authorities, made the point that it was the
Kabardians who "voluntarily became part of the Russian Empire" in 1557,
while the Balkars did so only 180 years ago, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported on
September 7.
By contrast, Adygeya has opted for restraint rather than pomp and
circumstance. Speaking on September 17 at a meeting of the committee tasked
with organizing the anniversary celebrations, President Aslancheryy
Tkhakushinov said that while Kanokov invited many federal politicians and
the heads of numerous federation subjects, Adygeya has invited only
representatives from Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachayevo-Cherkessia, Kuban, and
Abkhazia. The highlights were apparently to be a formal parade and one big
concert on September 26; also scheduled were various exhibits and a firework
display.
In Karachayevo-Cherkessia too, the celebrations will be on a more modest
scale than in Kabardino-Balkaria, and much of the population is reportedly
uncertain exactly what is to be celebrated, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported on
August 24. The website quoted a villager from Uchkeken in the extreme east
of the republic as saying "to be I honest, I don't know what's being
celebrated or who's organizing it, but we'll definitely go to the concert."
But a Cherkessk resident argued forcefully that "Adygeya and Kabardino-Balkaria
can celebrate if they want, after all, the Kabardians married off their
prince's daughter to Ivan the Terrible, but what does that have to do with
Karachayevo-Cherkessia?"
While many members of all three ethnic groups may simply greet the
anniversary celebrations as a welcome departure from the daily grind, and as
the catalyst for an injection of much-needed funding from Moscow to improve
infrastructure, a minority clearly resents what Adyg activist Arambii Khapai
on August 14 termed the "cynicism" with which Moscow's interpretation of
their history is being rammed down their throats. And that resentment is
likely to fuel that minority's alienation from Moscow, and its mistrust of
republican leaders seen as Moscow's compliant instruments.