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War Against History is No Path to Peace

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  • War Against History is No Path to Peace

    http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2011/05/16/war-against-history-is-no-path-to-peace/

    War Against History is No Path to Peace
    by Simon Maghakyan
    May 16, 2011

    Five years ago in December 2005, the magnificent medieval cemetery of
    Djulfa was reduced to dust in southwestern Azerbaijan. According to
    video evidence, the Azerbaijani army itself had conducted the
    operation to destroy the thousands of intricately carved khachkars, or
    cross-stones, which were the proof and symbol of ancient Armenian
    heritage in the exclave of Nakhichevan. `An absolute lie,' declared
    Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev, and then banned a European
    Parliament delegation from visiting the site.

    But last December, the American Association for the Advancement of
    Science publicly confirmed Djulfa's complete disappearance through
    satellite image comparison. A few months later, the Azeri authorities
    banned the US Ambassador to Azerbaijan from visiting the site where
    the cemetery existed.

    `Armenians have never lived in Nakhichevan, which has been Azerbaijani
    land from time immemorial, and that's why there are no Armenian
    cemeteries and monuments and have never been any,' is one argument -
    to quote Azeri official Hasan Zeynalov - of denial of the destruction.
    Such reasoning is not meant to cover up, but rather project the intent
    of the crime. Armenians, according to the official historiography in
    Azerbaijan, did not live in the Caucasus before the 19th century.

    While fighting history in Nakhichevan by making indigenous artifacts
    disappear, Azerbaijan vows to win back the Armenian region of Nagorno
    Karabakh it lost in a post-Soviet war in the 1990s. Such flare fails
    to realize that Karabakh's fight for freedom wasn't a mere tussle to
    revoke Joseph Stalin's 1920s awarding of Nagorno-Karabakh (along with
    Nakhichevan) to Soviet Azerbaijan, but a hustle to avoid Djulfa's very
    fate.

    Cultural destruction in post-Soviet conflicts is not unavoidable as
    seen in Armenia's ongoing restoration of Azerbaijani mosques in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and Azerbaijan's own 2004 renovation of the Armenian
    church, built in 1887, in the capital Baku. Drawing from the latter,
    Azerbaijan's government can reverse its war on history by facilitating
    an impartial investigation into the demolition that occurred at
    Djulfa; prosecuting those who gave orders and supervised the
    destruction; and designating the site where the cemetery existed as an
    archaeological landmark.

    Baku must acknowledge that a war against history is no path to peace.

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