Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Can't Armenians and Azerbaijanis just get along?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Can't Armenians and Azerbaijanis just get along?

    GetReligion
    Aug 13 2011


    Can't Armenians and Azerbaijanis just get along?


    The Washington Post published a news feature the other day about the
    stunningly complicated and delicate post-Soviet-era standoff in and
    around Nagorno-Karabakh, which pits Armenians against Azerbaijanis. On
    top of the story, of course, is a feature photograph - the first in a
    series.

    If you have ever seen a news feature about Eastern Orthodoxy you have
    probably seen this photo. It shows worshipers (represented, perhaps,
    by one or two symbolic hands in the frame) gathered around one of the
    sandboxes kept near the doors of Orthodox sanctuaries, which are there
    to safely hold those lovely golden beeswax candles that the faithful
    light as they make prayers for loved ones, for those who have died, as
    a sign of thanksgiving, out of concerns about difficulties in life,
    etc., etc.

    For copyright reasons, I cannot show you the photo - but click here to
    go see it.

    When I first started reading this long piece, I got hung up on the
    cutline that was underneath this photo. The photo, once again, showed
    people in prayer and worship - perhaps even people praying about those
    lost in the years of bloodshed in this troubled region.

    The cutline, however, stated:

    Peace remains elusive as Armenians and Azerbaijanis, unleashed from
    Soviet control 20 years ago, keep each other in the gunsights.

    I sensed a bit of a disconnect there.

    Thus, as I read the story, I wondered if the Post team (backed by the
    Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting) was ever going to get around to
    the religious issues that are at the emotional heart of the conflict.
    Meanwhile, the story starts like this:

    STEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh - This is where the first war set off by
    the Soviet collapse took place. And it may be where the next one
    breaks out.

    Twenty years ago, Armenians and Azerbaijanis, unleashed from Soviet
    control, waged a bitter struggle for this mountainous region in the
    South Caucasus. A cease-fire was reached in 1994, after about 30,000
    people had been killed, leaving Nagorno-Karabakh outside Azerbaijan's
    control, as an unrecognized, de facto republic in the hands of ethnic
    Armenians.

    Since then, no one on either side has had the will to hammer out a
    settlement. Tension has been put to use by those in power - in
    Azerbaijan, in Armenia proper and here in separatist Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Democracy, human rights, an unfettered press, a genuine opposition -
    these are the sorts of things that get put aside in times of crisis.
    And here, the crisis has been going on for two decades and shows
    little sign of letting up.

    This is one of those stories that mixes politics, ethnicity, centuries
    of complications and, of course, religion into one complex picture.
    However, mainstream journalists often seem reluctant to deal with the
    role of religion in these stories - even if that is one of the first
    things that people on the ground at the scene will talk about.

    Roughly halfway into this report, readers finally hear one of those
    caught up in the conflict say: `We will live and prove to the world
    that Karabakh is the heart of the Armenian nation and the spirit of
    the Armenian nation. The land on which we live has become sacred from
    the blood of our martyrs.'

    You see, the Armenians tend to use words such as `sacred' and
    `martyrs' in a religious context (and they have had to do this a lot).
    A few lines later, another Armenian voice calls Karabakh `holy.'

    Finally, a few more paragraphs later, readers get a glimpse of the
    religious history involved in all of this:

    The Armenian kingdom was the first to adopt Christianity as its
    official religion, in 301, and Azerbaijanis are Muslims, though both
    sides like to play down the religious divide. (Iran favors Armenia,
    for one thing.) Yet Armenians marked their tanks with white crosses.
    And at the mountaintop Gandzasar Monastery, where the St. John the
    Baptist Cathedral was consecrated in 1240, there is a regular liturgy
    for the `martyrs' of the war.

    `The strongest thing that keeps us here is our faith,' Prime Minister
    Ara Harutyunyan said. Then, using the Armenian name for Karabakh -
    Artsakh - he invoked a prophet who is a major figure in both
    Christianity and Islam. `In Artsakh, we have 70,000 Abrahams. We fully
    realize our children can become sacrifices any day. But we still live
    here, still give birth to children. And we think this is the main
    guarantee of our security.'

    There's a lot more to the story, including some strong language about
    the role of corruption in Armenian politics (and among the
    Azerbaijanis, perhaps?). In the background loom other nations that
    could get involved - such as Turkey and Russia. Religion is woven into
    those connections, too.

    Everyone agrees that there might be another war. That would be bad.
    Children and farm workers are still being killed by mines from the
    most recent conflict in a region that has seen more than its share of
    conflict.

    Religion seems to have a little bit to do with it. But clearly the
    main problems are political. Between the lines, the message seems to
    be this: If only the combatants were not so emotional about all of
    this - with their talk of `sacred' ground and `martyrs.'

    I finished the story and read it again. Twice. I still do not know
    what it was all about.

    But religion does seem to play a small role in the region. Just a
    little role, like at the beginning and then at the end of almost
    everything that happens in and around Nagorno-Karabakh. Oh, and in the
    middle, too.

    IMAGE: St. John the Baptist Orthodox Cathedral at Gandzasar Monastery.

    http://www.getreligion.org/2011/08/cant-armenians-and-azerbaijanis-just-get-along/

Working...
X