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  • Search for causes of USSR disintegration in Karabakh -1

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Sept 8 2014

    Search for causes of USSR disintegration in Karabakh -1

    8 September 2014 - 12:33pm

    By Peter Lyukimson, Israel, Kuryer N28-32, June 1992



    The feature story "Nagorno-Karabakh: chronicles of a conflict. Notes
    of a Jew from Baku" was written in 1992, soon after the author moved
    to Israel. It was published in a Russian-language newspaper in Israel
    called Kuryer. Those were the times when the tone in the cultural and
    the public life of the Russian-speaking community of Israel was set by
    the Moscow and Saint Petersburg clerisy. It had a big impact on the
    attitude of Israeli society towards the events on the territory of the
    former USSR. They sympathized with Armenia in its conflict with
    Azerbaijan. As it turned out, most Israelis knew nothing about the
    origin of the conflict or the truth about its development. The
    position of the Jewish clerisy in the issue was formed based only on
    publications in the central Soviet and partly in the Western press,
    which were not always impartial. To be precise, most of them were made
    from explicit lies and misinformation, some on semi-truths that are
    sometimes even worse than obvious lies, because they gain trust.

    It all inspired me to write "Notes of a Jew from Baku." Of course, I
    was not an ordinary "Jew from Baku." It just so happened that my
    career as a journalist coincided with the conflict around
    Nagorno-Karabakh, I was involuntarily in the center of events, spent a
    lot of time moving, meeting refugees, inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh
    and so on. All the impressions of the four years (1988-1991) were
    reflected in the story. Certainly, I did not know that much then, I
    could not know. In over two decades, there were certainly many
    documents declassified, many new testimonies appeared, many events
    happened, so it cannot be considered a full and absolutely impartial
    chronical of the conflict, I do not insist that myself.

    As I discovered, the feature story was published by an Azerbaijani
    paper the same year, then a brochure was published, it can be found in
    the catalogue of the Central Library of Azerbaijan. I hope to get hold
    of it someday...

    For every Azerbaijani, Karabakh today is the same as Jerusalem for
    Jews, the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius and Yasnaya Polyana for
    Russians, Versailles and the Bois de Boulogne for the French...

    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians had a happy life on the territory
    of all Azerbaijan; newspapers and books in the Armenian language were
    published, Armenian schools were open in Karabakh, Baku, Khanlar and
    other districts of the republic with at least a small Armenian
    population; an Armenian section existed in any large library of
    Azerbaijan... Regarding the economy of the NKAO, the rate of its
    development was ahead of the average in the republic, consequently,
    the NKAO turned into a rich region. All the authorities were solely
    Armenians, Armenians were chairing village councils even in
    Azerbaijani villages of the NKAO. There could be no discrimination
    against the Armenian population in Azerbaijan.

    The Azerbaijani population faced overt pressure from authorities of
    the autonomous region... Every year, thousands of families of
    Azerbaijanis were moving from the NKAO to other districts of the
    republic. By 1985, 123,000 Armenians and 37,000 Azerbaijanis were
    living in the region; when the Karabakh Khanate joined Russia, the
    region had only 90,000 inhabitants, 4,331 of them Armenians. The same
    year (1985), Armenians removed the inscription 150 from the memorial
    built in Mardakert for the 150th anniversary of the settlement of
    Armenians in Karabakh.

    It is Karabakh where the origins of the separatism that eroded the
    "unbreakable union" hide. The strikes in Karabakh became the beginning
    of the economic crisis the former Union is in, they were declared
    right in that period when the first, careful economic reforms produced
    the first results - in 1987, the fall in the rate of growth of
    national income was halted for the first time in 1.5 years.

    The events started with the decision made at another Armenian National
    Congress in Paris held in 1987 to use the democratic reforms in the
    USSR to fulfil "the fair demands of the Armenian people" for "reunion"
    of the NKAO with Armenia. The same year, in Paris, Gorbachev's
    economic advisor Abel Aganbegyan met officials of the Armenian
    diaspora in France, after which he was in a hurry for an interview
    with French newspapers, in which he said that Karabakh, located in the
    north-east of the republic, had become Armenian. Abel Aganbegyan said:
    "As an economist, I believe that it is connected closer with Armenia
    than Azerbaijan. I made a proposal for it. I hope that the problem
    will find a solution in the context of Perestroika and democracy." At
    the same time, the Armenian and the All-Union press started publishing
    articles by Armenian publicists with a message that the Azerbaijanis
    were alien people of the Trans-Caucasus without historical origins or
    their own culture and all the territory had been Armenian from the
    very beginning. Some of the authors were even trying to declare
    Azerbaijan's greatest poet Nizami Ganjavi to be an Armenian.

    The peak of anti-Azerbaijani "hysteria" was achieved in 1987 after
    publication of Armenian poet Silva Kaputikyan's poem "Friendship of
    Peoples," urging readers to repeat the path of "glorious Andranik" and
    move through Azerbaijani villages with a "Berdan rifle and winding
    sheet."

    Soon after, many copies of Zori Balayan's "Hearth" were published,
    depicting Karabakh as the "hearth" of the Armenian nation. The book
    criticizes the Azerbaijanis for... breeding too fast, so it was
    recommended to sterilize Azerbaijani women as a preventive measure.

    Azerbaijan figured that it should respond. Dozens of historians and
    literature critics - from skilled to amateurs - wrote reviews of the
    book but the Azerbaijani authorities prohibited publishing anything on
    the topic, under the pretext that such publications can cause "a
    divide between the brotherly Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples..."

    And there, in Stepanakert, started protests with demands to adjoin the
    NKAO to Armenia, backed in Yerevan. The protests consisted of only a
    few hundred people but, in just a few days, they grew to tens of
    thousands. The demands and slogans in Yerevan and Stepanakert were
    surprisingly familiar: it is time to rectify "Stalin's mistake" and
    reunite the people of the NKAO and their "Mother Armenia." After the
    Armenian demonstrations of 1987 going through Armenia and
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Moscow was confused...

    To be continued

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/politics/59709.html

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