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Intellectual And Cultural Setback In Azerbaijan

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  • Intellectual And Cultural Setback In Azerbaijan

    INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL SETBACK IN AZERBAIJAN

    NEWS.am
    12:03 / 08/11/2009

    Azerbaijani website 1news.az raised a concern with intellectual level
    of modern Azerbaijani society. The author of article under "Classics
    should be read (now and then)..." head, published August 11, states:
    "Under Soviet regime Azeris were not the most literate nation of
    all Soviet republics. Only Muscovites and intellectuals in regions
    were those being in fond of reading and constantly enriching their
    library..."

    "Under various reasons, like instability in the first years
    of Azerbaijan independence, Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict,
    Nagorno-Karabakh military conflict, the majority of reading people
    left Baku. Due to social-economic problems and shifting priorities,
    book is no more a thoughtful gift, as well as library is not host's
    pride," the author asserts, acknowledging that Armenians and Russians
    being the intellectual and cultural backbone of Azerbaijani SSR left
    Baku and regions under the mentioned circumstances.

    The author recalls that within last 70 years Azerbaijani alphabet has
    been changed thrice which also impacted the reading circles. "By no
    means all could easily adapt to new alphabet and deprive themselves
    of a pleasure to read modern literature published in the country,"
    the author concludes.

    I concur wholeheartedly with the author on uneasy lot of the
    nation that lacks alphabetic script due to historical and cultural
    setback. However one can argue for the advantages and disadvantages
    of the modern Azerbaijani publications - propagandist and agitation
    literature, as well as some 'historical' piece of writing that are
    fully donated by Mehriban Aliyeva's foundation. Should one read this
    stuff? It's a rhetorical question...

    "Another reason for decreasing number of readers after independence is
    definitely the advocated switch of political benchmarks. The result -
    everything from Turkey is considered right and proper in Azerbaijan,"
    the text reads "Russian-speaking mass was replaced by Turkish-speaking
    passion". And here the information of Turkish Radical daily (referring
    to Independent Trade Union of educators data) is right to the point,
    stating that average Turk reads one book in 10-year period. Conclusions
    on the prospects of Azerbaijani intellectual growth reading this
    statistics inevitably come to mind.
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