INTRODUCTION
This issue is devoted to the Circassians. (1) The
Circassians or -- their own name for themselves -- Adyg are the descendants of
the indigenous inhabitants of the Northwest Caucasus. After an armed resistance
to Russian conquest that lasted 101 years (1763 1864) longer than in any
other part of the Caucasus almost all of the survivors were deported to the
Ottoman Empire.
To many readers this may seem a rather obscure topic.
However, a revival of national consciousness among Circassians is currently
underway and it is very probable that problems associated with this revival
will acquire increasing salience in coming years.
I myself came across the Circassian theme pretty much by
chance. While browsing in the library of Brown University, I happened to come
across some old books by 19th-century travelers describing a country called
Circassia and a people called Circassians. Like many others, I had been unaware
that there was any such country or people, though perhaps I had seen the words
somewhere without understanding them. At about the same time, an antiquarian
friend offered me some 18th and 19th century maps of Russia and Europe. From
these I learned where Circassia used to be and traced the stages by which the
expanding empire of the tsars swallowed it up.
My curiosity was piqued. A little more research, mainly in
the Russian-language literature, led to an essay "The Circassians: A
Forgotten Genocide?" that was published in a collection entitled "The
Massacre in History" (eds. Mark Levene and Penny Roberts, Berghahn Books,
1999). After some years during which I focused on other research topics, I was
surprised to hear from Mr. Metin Sonmez, a young man of Circassian origin who
lives in Turkey and runs the excellent CircassianWorld website. Mr. Sonmez had
somehow discovered my essay and wanted to place it on his site and also have it
translated for publication in Turkish in the journal of a Circassian
organization. Permission was obtained from the original publisher and this was
done. (2) Since then I have received touching messages from Circassians in
various countries thanking me for "remembering" and writing about
their people.
Not that I was the first contemporary Western scholar to
write about the Circassians or their deportation. The acknowledged expert on
Circassian language, myth, and culture is Professor John Colarusso, while
accounts of the Circassian deportation by Willis Brooks and Paul Henze appeared
before mine. My account happened to be the first that, thanks to Mr. Sonmez,
was brought to the attention of a broad Circassian readership.
Circassian Studies is gradually emerging as a new academic
specialization. With regard specifically to the deportation, the most important
new scholar is Irma Kreiten (Universities of Tubingen and Southampton), whose
work will undoubtedly become the authoritative analysis of the topic.
So far there have been two academic conferences on Caucasian
Studies. The first ("The Circassians: Past, Present and Future") was
held at the Jamestown Foundation on May 21, 2007. The second conference
("Russia and the Circassians") was held under the aegis of Harvard
University's Carr Center for Human Rights Policy on April 8,2008. Much of this issue of RAS consists of summaries of
various presentations made at the Harvard conference, prepared either by the
presenters or by myself, although it is far from being a complete report of the
conference.
The material from the conference is interspersed with other
material related to the Circassians. To distinguish the two kinds of material,
I precede the titles of items from the conference with an asterisk.
I have organized the conference material by broad
chronological categories into three sections:
Section 1. The Circassians before the Russian conquest
Section 2. Conquest and deportation
Section 3. Circassians today (both in Russia and in the
diaspora)
I conclude with some reflections of my own about the future
prospects and dangers of Circassian nationalism.
NOTES
(1) The last item (under DEBATE) is connected to a topic in
the previous issue. I have already written a little about the Circassians in RAS
37 (items 5 and 6).
(2) http:///www.circassianworld.com/A_Forgotten_Genocide.pdf
(3) See the works of John Colarusso, also the 1995 article
by Willis Brooks referenced in note 8 of my "forgotten genocide"
essay.
Section 1 -- -- BEFORE THE RUSSIAN
CONQUEST
WHO ARE THE CIRCASSIANS?
Most people have no idea who the Circassians are. This was
brought home to me when I chanced upon a blog written by Andy McSmith, a senior
reporter for the British newspaper "The Independent" with "vast
experience in political journalism." Responding to someone who claims to
be of partly Circassian descent and speaking as a man who has traveled widely
in the Caucasus, he writes:
"So far as I know, no one has ever come across anyone
who says: 'I am a Circassian.' Nor, indeed, is there a place called
Circassia."
He admits that 19th-century Russian literature contains
references to the Circassians, especially to the beauty of Circassian women,
and suggests that the Circassians were a figment of the Russian literary
imagination
In the Caucasus, there is a close correspondence between the
ethno-cultural map and the linguistic map, so a good way of explaining who the
Circassians are is to start with languages. There are many languages in the
Caucases, but we need to distinguish between "non-Caucasian languages of
the Caucasus" -- languages that are spoken in the Caucasus but originated
elsewhere and Caucasian languages in the narrow sense, that is, languages
that are indigenous and unique to the Caucasus
Non-Caucasian languages of the Caucasus belong to several
families Indo-European (e.g., Russian), the Turkic branch of Altaic (e.g.,
Azeri, Balkar, Karachai), the Mongolic branch of Altaic (Kalmyk), and Iranian (e.g., Osset). Caucasian languages
proper belong to three families: Northwest, Northeast, and South. These
families, while all "Caucasian," are not closely related.
The main language (in terms of number of speakers) in the
South Caucasian family is Georgian. The Northeast Caucasian family includes
Chechen and Ingush and many of the languages spoken in Dagestan. Circassian is
historically the main language of the Northwest Caucasian family. Others are
Ubykh and Abkhaz. Members of the Ubykh group also consider themselves
Circassians, so we have here a single ethnic group with two distinct languages.
Abkhaz do not regard themselves as Circassians but acknowledge kinship with
them.
In turn, Circassian has several dialects, associated with
the different "tribal" groups. These dialects fall into two groups:
West Circassian and East Circassian (or Kabardian). (1)
The Circassians can be traced back to ancient times. Like
the ancient Greeks, they had a strong ethno-cultural identity without being
politically united. Right up to the conquest, they lived in villages (auls) by
means of agriculture, livestock rearing, beekeeping, metalworking and other
crafts.
In religion they had their own pantheon in ancient times.
From the 6th century they were under the Christianizing influence of Georgia
and Byzantium, and from the 15th century under the Islamizing influence of
Ottoman Turkey. However, neither Christianity nor Islam ever became firmly
entrenched: they often mixed with ancient beliefs and with one another (e.g.,
ancient deities became saints but kept their shrines).
The Circassians evolved a complex feudal structure with
princes, nobles, free commoners, and serfs. In this respect they differed from
the Chechens, who were all free commoners (uzgen). There are indications of a
matriarchal or at least matrilineal family in primeval times, but in the
historical period the family was strongly patriarchal. For instance, a father
had the right to sell his daughter into slavery. He might sell one daughter in
order to pay for another daughter's dowry. In this way many Circassian women
entered Turkish harems.
From the late 18th century a process of democratization
began in Circassian society. In some tribes the feudal structure was
simplified, in others done away with altogether. I don't know why this
happened; some authors connect it with Islamization. The process was incomplete
at the time of conquest and deportation. Mr. Barsaqua tells me that some noble
families took their servants into exile with them and reconstituted feudal
relations in their settlements in Turkey.
NOTE
(1) The term "Circassian" is sometimes used
narrowly to refer to the western dialects only, as distinct from the two
Kabardian dialects, and sometimes used to include the latter. There is also an
ambiguity in usage of the term "Kabardian": it may refer to both
eastern dialects or to only one of them (the other being Besleney).
ANCIENT DEITIES OF THE CIRCASSIANS
Source. M.A. Kumakhov and Z.Yu. Kumakhova, Nartskii epos:
iazyk i kul'tura [The Nart Epic: Language and Culture] (Moscow: Nasledie,
1998).
Like other peoples of the North Caucasus, the Circassians
have preserved ancient sagas about the Narts a race of monstrous giants who
once lived in the Caucasus. (1) In some versions the Narts are presented as the
ancestors of the Circassians, in others as a neighboring people with whom the
ancient Circassians interacted and who later became extinct.
Kumakhov and Z.Yu. Kumakhova are researchers at the
Institute of Philology of the Russian Academy of Sciences. They analyze the
lexicon of the Nart sagas with a view to discerning how the ancient Circassians
may have lived their pantheon, the geography, flora and fauna of their
environment, their social and family structure, clothing, weaponry, units of
measurement, number and color symbolism, etc.
The authors note that the complete absence of the idea of
monotheism from the sagas testifies to their great antiquity. There is a
"great god" Tkhashkho who is superior to other deities, but even
this is a late innovation. The names of many gods and goddesses came from other
unrelated languages, including languages of the Indo-European family,
suggesting their adoption from other peoples (for instance, from the Hittites
of Asia Minor). In some cases (e.g., Amysh, guardian of livestock rearing) a
figure who appears sometimes as a god may also appear as a Nart. Thus, the
Narts seem to have been perceived as an intermediate level between human beings
and gods.
Other deities were:
Washkho - god of the sky
Shible, later called Yele - god of lightning and thunder
Sozresh - god of tilling
Psatkhe - god of the soul
Psitkhe - goddess of water
Mazitkhe - god of the forest and of hunting
Mezguasshe - goddess of the forest and of hunting (2)
Tlepsh - god of fire and of the blacksmith's
craft
Tkhagalej - god of fertility and of the harvest
Aushijer - variously, god of war and weaponry,
hunting, or travel
Pako - a god to whom the Narts made sacrifices
until they fell out with him. He then sent a drought to their land.
NOTES
(1) The Nart sagas have been translated into English and
annotated by Professor John Colarusso. See his "Nart Sagas from the
Caucasus: Myths and Legends of the Circassians, Abazas, Abkhaz, and Ubykh"
(Princeton University Press, 2002).
(2) There is a beautiful song about Mezguasshe at http://www.circassianworld.com/Adyghe_Abkhaz_musics.html
THE TRADITIONAL WAY OF LIFE OF THE CIRCASSIANS (1)
To be able to defend their homeland against invaders the
Circassians had to cultivate a warrior lifestyle. This was especially true of
the princes and nobles, who devoted themselves to fighting. At the other end of
the social spectrum, serfs who were not of Circassian origin (2) were not
allowed to fight. However, a serf who showed an aptitude for fighting could be
elevated to a higher social rank.
A boy started to learn fighting skills and horsemanship at
an early age. Special kinds of weapons were designed for children. The
relationship between father and son resembled that between superior and
subordinate in the army. The father maintained his distance from his son, with
the mother acting as go-between. If the mother was absent, the father would
speak directly to his son but using the third person.
At age 10 the son of a noble would be sent to live with an
atalyk a friend of the father who undertook to be the boy's second father and
complete his military training.
The night raid was a common custom. A small group of
horsemen would quietly approach another village to rustle horses and cattle,
which were then divided among them. If the border of Circassia was nearby, a
non-Circassian village was raided. Otherwise a neighboring Circassian village
was raided; this could lead to a blood feud. In some cases, whole families were
destroyed in this fashion. But a man had to be able to fight and had to go on
night raids, otherwise no father would let him marry his daughter.
There was a strong bond between a Circassian and his horse.
The horse was not only his most valuable possession but also his brother. The
horse was assigned a status higher than that of other animals, and was regarded
almost as human.
The Circassian was also proud of his weapons. The craft of
weapon making was highly developed. The best weapons were made of silver or
(for princes) gold. When the Cossacks penetrated Circassia they adopted
Circassian dress and weaponry.
NOTES
(1) These notes reflect only part of Ibragim Yagan's
presentation. He also talked about the Circassian armed resistance to Russian
conquest, the role of Circassian volunteers in the Abkhaz-Georgian war, and
other matters.
(2) That is, they were prisoners of war or their
descendants.
Section 2 -- -- THE DEPORTATION
THE CONQUEST AND DEPORTATION OF THE CIRCASSIANS
At the end of the Crimean War (1853-6), General Bariatinsky
consolidated the administrative units of the North Caucasus into the Left
(East) and Right (West) Flanks. As the Ossetians were always cooperative with
the Russians and the Kabardians had surrendered after a devastating plague, the
Central North Caucasus was subdued. Thus, the two largest groups of North
Caucasus peoples still resisting the Russians, the Chechens and the
Circassians, were effectively cut off from each other. After Shamil's defeat in
1859 and the subjugation of the Northeast, the entire Russian army was brought
to bear against the Northwest Caucasus. During the period 1859-1864, Circassians
and their kin, the Abazas and Ubykhs, were overwhelmed.
In May 1859 the Bzhedukh tribe surrendered, followed by the
Abadzakhs in November, and both were initially allowed to remain on their
lands. An international force under the Pole Teofik Lapinski left in Nov. 1859,
but it had proven incompetent and played no serious role in the end of the
Russo-Circassian War.
The first formulation of the ethnic cleansing of the
Circassians was forwarded by Emperor Alexander II:
"The Cossack community is destined to serve the
government by defending the empire's borders adjacent to hostile and
poorly organized tribes and to occupy the land from which they have been taken…
Only a few years of persistent pressure remain in order to completely drive the
hostile mountaineers from the fertile lands they occupy and forever establish
in their place a Russian Christian population." (1)
At a meeting in October 1860, Prince Bariatinksy and General
Fadeev called for "the unconditional expulsion of the Circassians from
their mountain refuges." General Yevdokimov wanted to "compel them
either to resettle in the open lowlands or leave for Turkey." The tribes
that had already submitted were to be deported as well as those still resisting,
such as the Shapsegh, Natukhay, Ubykh, Abaza, and Abkhaz.
There were some outside gestures of support for the
Circassians' plight. In 1861 a British delegation offered recognition, along
with the Turks and French, if the Circassians united against the Russians. In
response Circassians set up a capital at Sochi, created 13 administrative units
and began to work on a single legal code. In1862 a Circassian delegation
visited Istanbul, and sought support from Europe. Unfortunately, it was all too
late and for naught, despite a multinational force and diplomacy. After an
audience with Aleksandr II, who remained inflexible, the remaining Circassians,
Ubykhs, and Abazas retreated to the headwaters of the Psekups, Pshish, and
Psekha Rivers, where they made their final stand.
Even before the deportations, some Northwest Caucasus
peoples chose to emigrate to the Ottoman Empire. In 1858-9 approximately 30,000
Turkic Nogais left, followed by perhaps 10,000 Kabardians in 1861. The
Besleneys, Temirgoys, many remaining Kabardians, and some Abazas were driven to
the Black Sea coast in 1861 as well. In 1862 40,000 Natukhais, who had already surrendered and
accepted the Russians' original conditions that they resettle in the lowlands,
were forced to the coast in May. In 1863 a similar fate befell the Khatukays
and Bzhedukhs. Cossack settlements (stanitsy) were rapidly established on
the vacated land; by 1862 there were already 111.
A deportation commission was created on 10 May 1862. Each family was to receive 10 rubles compensation.
General Yevdokimov declared the action completed on 21 May 1864, although his
troops were still pursuing one fleeing family at the time. Cossacks were given
the vacated land en masse, and the 400,000 Cossacks north of the Kuban rapidly
settled Circassia. As Fadeev relates:
"The enemy no longer existed… All [the mountaineers']
crops were inherited by the Russian settlers, who were able to live there for
the first year without having to plant anything." (2)
According to Fadeev, 60,000 Circassians remained after the
deportation, representing 6% of the original population, while researcher
Galina Malakhova estimates 40,400 remained, or approximately 4 percent. By
1870, 70 percent of the population was Slavic.
The process of deportation brought wholesale suffering and
death on an almost incomprehensible scale. A Russian officer identified only as
I. Drozdov (1877) related a string of horrors he had witnessed, including
half-dead women and children being eaten by dogs while still alive, and estimated
that half of those who survived to embark died at sea. Ottoman reports estimate
that
180,000 died shortly after arrival. While the actual number
of dead is still a difficult question, it is beyond doubt that no less than one
million people were deported, and that well over 50 percent of them died. (3)
In 1882, Kuban Province had only 36,000 Circassians, less
then 3.6 percent of original population. All the Ubykhs were deported, and
their civilization was effectively annihilated. The vast majority of Abazas,
50,000, were also deported. In 1883, Kuban Province had only 10,326 Abazas.
Thus, the Russian action resulted in roughly a 94 percent
reduction in the original population of the Circassians and their kin. Does
this amount to genocide?
Russia could have exterminated them, but chose not to. St.
Petersburg sought ethnic cleansing (the Russian term "ochistit'"
recurs throughout Yevdokimov's reports) without regard for the welfare of those
cleansed. Yevdokimov and other commanders proceeded with the cleansing in full
knowledge of the catastrophic level of casualties. Stephen Shenfield calls the
deportation "a case of ethnic cleansing carried out with brutal disregard
for human suffering,"
(4) while Paul Henze states that "the great exodus [of
the Circassians and their kin] was the first of the violent mass transfers of
population which this part of the world has suffered in modern times." (5)
One must note, however. the deportation of the Cherokee and
other Indians in 1838, the "Trail of Tears." Such actions were an
integral part of expansionist phases in the formation of large states or
empires during the 19th century. As one of us (Walter Richmond) puts it in his
forthcoming book:
"If one considers, as Henze proposes, that Russian actions
in the 1860s set the precedent for future ethnic cleansings, then in terms of
its ultimate consequences the deportation of the Circassians, Abazins, and
Ubykhs, officially sanctioned by Alexander II, was a unique crime against
humanity, regardless of what term one wishes to attach to it." (6)
Since as with murder in the second degree, that is, an
action causing death without necessarily the intention of death, one might
usefully make a distinction here between intended genocide and what the Russians
committed as "Genocide in the Second Degree."
One might reasonably ask why this tragedy came to pass,
despite the Tsar's ethnocentric and bigoted views, since earlier relations
between the Russians and the Circassians had been friendly. Many Russian nobles
were, in fact, of Circassian origin, such as Cherkassky, Sherametov, and even
Yermolov (Circassian for 'Armenian'). Ivan the Terrible had a Circassian
wife.
A shift began with the annexation of Georgia in 1801 and the desire to secure the head of the future
Georgian Military Highway, which lay in Ossetia. As a result Russia began to
back the Ossetians against the Circassians. Russian reaction to the adverse
experience of the Crimean War (1853-6) seems also to have raised the stakes for
Russia in the nearby Caucasus.
Whatever the character of earlier relations the cultural
chauvinism of an expanding Russia had grown intense. As Fadeev out it,
"A fundamental difference exists between the East and
West Caucasus in that the Circassians, owing to their position along the coast,
could never be firmly consolidated into Russia as long as they remained in
their homeland… The re-education of a people is a centuries-long process, but
in the pacification of the Caucasus the time had come for us, perhaps only for
a brief time, TO COMPLETE ONE OF THE MOST VITAL TASKS IN RUSSIAN HISTORY"
(my emphasis JC).
To see the conquest of this relatively small region as
"one of the most vital tasks in Russian history" suggests that the
significance of the Caucasus had become very high for Russia. It is a
historical fact that after the conquest of the Caucasus Russia expanded across
Central Asia with relative ease. Even today Russia shrouds her conquest of the
Caucasus in romantic terms. Simple geopolitical considerations off an
explanation for this persistent interest. Russian control of the Caucasus
permitted the Kremlin to play a hegemonic role in Central Asia and the Ukraine
region. In particular, Russian control of the Caucasus permitted the Kremlin to
project force into the South Caucasus, and continued control makes it possible
to do so again.
Russian control of the Caucasus gives the Kremlin the chance
to project influence or even force into the Middle East and Iran, something she
has never done with lasting effect but might yet consider attempting. Russian
control of the Caucasus permitted the Kremlin to master the Black Sea, and
continued control offers the potential to do establish a base for a warm water
fleet. The West, including the United States, has failed to grasp these vital
dimensions of the Caucasus.
With these stakes, the fate of a relatively small,
independent, warrior culture of alien pedigree was of little consequence to
Russia. One might even share, in a calculating fashion, the Russian estimation
that without the destruction of the Circassians Russia might not have been able
to secure an empire on the scale that she achieved.
NOTES
(1) Tagan Khabasovich Kumykov, ed. Arkhivnye materially o
kavkazskoi voine i vyselenii Cherkesov (Adygov) v Turtsiiu (1848 1874), pt.
II (Nalchik: El-Fa, 2003), p. 80.
(2) Fadeev, Kavkazskaia voina, p. 201.
(3) Drozdov, "Posledniaia bor'ba s gortsami na Zapadnom
Kavkaze," Kavkazskii sbornik 2 (1877), pp. 456 7.
(4) Stephen D. Shenfield, "The Circassians: A Forgotten
Genocide?" (see www.circassianworld.com).
(5) Henze, "Circassian Resistance to Russia,"
Marie Bennigsen Broxup et al., eds. The North Caucasus Barrier: The Russian
Advance Towards the Muslim World (NY: St. Martin's Press, 1992), p. 111.
(6) Richmond, The Northwest Caucasus: Past, Present, and
Future (London: Routledge, in press).
This will be the first book to present a comprehensive
history of the Northwest Caucasus. Based on extensive research, it describes
the peoples of the Northwest Caucasus, which have a significantly different
ethnic makeup and history than the Northeast (Chechnia and Daghestan). The book examines their struggles
for survival against repeated invasions and their ultimate defeat at the hands
of the Russians. It explores inter-ethnic relations and demographic changes
that have occurred in the region over time, with a particular focus on the
19th, 20th and 21st centuries. Use is made of recently published archival
materials on the deportation of the Abazas, Circassians, and Ubykhs to the
Ottoman Empire by the Russians, which is treated as the first act of ethnic
cleansing in modern history.
The book also closely examines the struggles the Northwest
Caucasus peoples continue to undergo in the post-Soviet era, facing pressures
from organized crime, religious extremism, and a federal government
unresponsive to their needs. It emphasizes the strategic importance of the
region, lying on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea directly on the border
between the "Christian" and "Muslim" worlds. It will be of
interest to scholars of Russian history and politics, Caucasus and Central
Asian studies, genocide studies, international relations and conflict studies.
ON THE PATH TO GENOCIDE: RUSSIA'S "FINAL
SUBJUGATION" OF THE NORTHWEST CAUCASUS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Irma Kreiten began by showing how contemporary Russian
observers perceived the rapid removal of a whole population from the Northwest
Caucasus in the early 1860s as something new and extraordinary, although
"they had difficulties in nailing down the exact nature of this
'newness'." What is the relationship between this new quality and the
present-day concept of genocide?
Our current concept of genocide originates in the efforts of
a Polish-Jewish jurist named Raphael Lemkin to obtain official recognition of
the Nazi extermination of Jews (including most of his own relatives) as a
special crime in international law. In 1948 the UN passed a convention on
genocide, defined as acts of various kinds "committed with intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious
group."
Besides the emphasis on physical destruction, this
definition is remarkable for its focus on the intent of the perpetrators. Thus,
whether an event constitutes genocide does not depend on the number killed or
the extent of suffering caused, for death and suffering may be unintended side
effects of a policy in pursuit of a different aim.
In order to determine the intent of the perpetrators of the
Circassian deportation, the speaker examined the positions expressed by tsarist
officials and military officers involved in the decision-making process that
led to the deportation. In a memorandum of 1856, Count Dmitri Milyutin (later
war minister) argued that the Northwest Caucasus could not be secured by merely
subjugating the Circassian tribes because their "anarchic" habits and
political structure made this impossible; it was therefore necessary to remove
them from their lands. However, he explicitly excluded the option of extermination
and suggested an exchange of populations: the Circassians would be resettled on
the Don, while the Don Cossacks would be resettled in Circassia. Baryatinsky,
the then army commander in the Caucasus, supported Milyutin's proposal.
The government commission set up to examine the question
opposed Milyutin's plan as "highly dangerous" on the grounds that any
attempt at deportation would provoke such resistance that the end result would
be extermination. Baryatinsky responded by defending the deportation plan and
indignantly denying that his intent was extermination.
A handful of sources before 1856 had clearly expressed
exterminatory intent. Moreover, in 1865 General Fadeyev wrote: "It was
necessary to exterminate half of the mountaineers in order to force the other
half to lay down their arms." Irma Kreiten comments: "While
extermination does not figure here as an aim in itself, it is at least
consciously accepted." There does not seem to be a consensus among jurists
concerning whether such "acceptance" suffices to qualify as genocidal
intent.
In short, existing sources do not enable us to judge with
any confidence "to which degree Russian authorities in the 1860s
consciously and deliberately caused mass death as an aim in itself."
However, the plans to resettle Circassians within Russia did aim at their
forced assimilation i.e., socio-cultural destruction.
Irma Kreiten contrasted two possible perspectives on
exterminatory violence: events may be considered in the light of their end
results or the focus may be on the cumulative process of policy formation and
decision making. Some massacres have a greater degree of central organization
than others, but even a highly bureaucratized operation such as the Nazi
"final solution" developed gradually. The processual approach is best
suited to the study of the Circassian deportation.
SONGS OF LAMENT
Source. Tragicheskie posledstviya kavkazskoi voiny dlia
adygov. Sbornik dokumentov i materialov [The Tragic Consequences of the
Caucasian War for the Circassians. A Collection of Documents and Material]
(Nalchik: el'-fa, 2000), pp. 418 20
In the wake of deportation, the Circassian exiles in Turkey
composed "songs of lament" to express their sorrow. The words of four
of these songs are reproduced (in Russian) in this collection of documents on
the deportation, published in Kabardino-Balkaria. The translation into English
is mine. (Of course, it would be better to translate them directly from
Circassian.)
The first two songs are taken from the manuscript archive of
the Kabardino-Balkar Scientific Research Institute of History, Philology, and
Ethnography.
DEPARTURE ACROSS THE SEA
Across the ancient Black Sea they ship us And land us in
Istanbul. The morning train approaches. We flee together and bemoan our fate.
The beautiful birds suffered for us When we left the Marys
Forest. Through Armavir go the trains. Our departure, woe is us, is a great
misfortune. In Armavir the samovars seethe; A seething calamity was Istanbul
for us. The golden time, o woe, o breast, is broken; With broken hearts we
leave for Istanbul.
WE LEAVE FOR ISTANBUL
Across the Black Sea they threw us. In Istanbul they threw
us down. Right away the Turkish police gather And summon us to the Sufi mosque.
The Turkish bosses arrive in carriages And divide us up like a herd of sheep.
"Kabardinians who have left your homeland, I assign you to residence in
Tam Sharif (Syria). It's a good place, you will live with the Arabs."
Kabardinians, woe is us, they torment us. Among the savage Turkish Tatars we
shall die. We shall perish in the desert.
The next song is from an anthology of Kabardinian poetry
(Antologiia kabardinskoi poezii, Moscow 1957, pp. 79 80).
THEY DRIVE US TO ISTANBUL
Black crows flap their wings. The foul Anzorov runs the
show. Homeland, we won't see you again.
They deceitfully foisted passports on us all. They cheated
us, and we're not allowed to argue. They drive us from our native land!
The train leaves without delay, The train hoots, drowns out our
sobbing. Don't forget us, dear country!
The winds ruffle our brocade headscarves. Brothers, hardly
shall we meet again! They drive us, drive us out of our fathers' land!
Someone's harmonica weeps and sobs. There is no way back to
our homeland for us. They have torn us from our native soil!
Say farewell to your dear ones, torment your heart. The
Turkish consul is irritated and hurries us. They drive and carry us far, far
away.
Most moving of all, perhaps, is the following song, taken from
the book on the Ubykh genocide by the Abkhaz writer and public figure Bagrat
Shinkuba (1917 2004), "The Last of the Departed" (Poslednii iz
ushedshikh, Moscow 1988, p. 78).
SONG OF THE UBYKH
O, what a bitter fate, What a bitter fate! How vast the sea
And how tiny a patch Of native land! The poor land is desolate, And the cuckoo
freezes on the bough. She has no one to foretell the seasons. Have you said
farewell to the dead? Have you told them we shall not return? You should have
told them: The dead may not be deceived! Let us turn to face our mountains
They don't know where we are going. Let us turn and leave them a song So that
it should wander, like an echo, From one mountain to the next. If a child
leaves his mother, Does that mean she is to blame? Is she really to blame?
"Why are you leaving, children? Of what am I guilty, children?" Our
land weeps. Our land questions us. Forgive us! We are powerless to stay. We can
leave you One thing only our soul. We are going forever. She remains forever.
Section 3 -- -- CIRCASSIANS TODAY
THE CIRCASSIAN DIASPORA IN TURKEY (1)
The Circassian exiles were settled in the Ottoman Empire in
accordance with a plan based on demographic and strategic considerations. The
aims were to strengthen border defenses and increase the proportion of Moslems
in predominantly non-Moslem areas (e.g. the Balkans). After defeat in the 1877
78 war with Russia, Circassians settled in the Balkans had to be moved again
to Anatolia, Syria, and Palestine.
Conditions in the early years of settlement (up to about
1900) were very harsh and only the strongest survived. At the same time, some
elite Circassians managed to establish good relations with the Palace and
obtain important positions in the military and civilian bureaucracy.
The first Circassian organization in the diaspora was the
Committee of Circassian Union and Solidarity, established by a group of
intellectuals in 1908. This committee published the first Circassian diaspora
periodical, "Guaze" (Guide), in Turkish and Circassian. It also set up schools
in the Caucasus and printed books for these schools in specially designed
alphabets. Other cultural, charitable and political organizations followed,
including the Circassian Women Solidarity Committee, which in 1919 founded the
first Circassian-language school.
The Circassian organizations supported the unsuccessful
attempt to establish a Mountain Peoples' Republic in the northern Caucasus in 1918. Circassian militias played a very important role in
the War of Independence that led to the proclamation of the Turkish Republic in
1923. However, the new government did not trust the Circassians. "The
revolution devoured its children": the militia leader Pshav Ethem was
accused of treason.
Like other ethnic minorities, the Circassians were placed
under strong pressure to assimilate into a culturally homogeneous Turkish
nation. In the period 1922 24:
- All Circassian committees, schools, and newspapers were
closed down.
- Circassians were forced to change their surnames.
- 14 Circassian villages were forcibly relocated from
western to eastern Anatolia.
- 150 persons, 86 of them Circassians, were deprived of
citizenship and expatriated as "potential rebels."
The pressure continued for many years. The names of
Circassian villages were changed. Many families were prosecuted for giving
their children non-Turkish names and the names were altered. Following the
language law of 1932, campaigns were organized under the slogan: "Citizen,
speak Turkish!" and notices prohibiting speaking Circassian were displayed
in Circassian villages.
The situation eased somewhat after World War Two. A
Circassian association was re-established in 1951. In the postwar period, the situation of the
Circassians has varied with the political situation in Turkey. Circassian
associations were banned after each military coup and then allowed again 3 5
years later. Also in this period many Circassians left the villages to work or
study in the cities. A political division arose among Circassians as there
emerged a movement of pro-Soviet Circassians who called for immediate
"return" to the Caucasus.
There are currently more than 100 NGOs in Turkey dealing
with Circassian and North Caucasus affairs, linked in two federations. About 80
periodicals are published on these issues.
With the advent of perestroika, it became possible for
diaspora Circassians to visit the homeland and communicate with the Circassian
republics in the Caucasus. Some planned to return to the homeland, but were
deterred by the wars in Abkhazia and Chechnya. The Russian authorities have
also placed obstacles in the way of those wishing to return. Only about 1,500
people have returned so far.
These wars did, however, politicize Turkish citizens of
North Caucasus origin. On August 16,1992 a demonstration was held in Istanbul to protest against
the passive stance of the Turkish government regarding the Georgian invasion of
Abkhazia. Hundreds of young men went to fight on the Abkhaz side. Five of the
volunteers from Turkey were killed. (2)
According to census data, there were 100,000 Circassian and
Abkhaz speakers in Turkey in 1927 and 125,000 in 1965. However, many
Circassians were afraid to reveal their ethnic identity. The lowest figure for
the number who survived resettlement in the Ottoman Empire is 400,000. Assuming
a doubling of population every 35 years, the expected population today must be
over 6 million or, if half have been assimilated, over 3 million.
At least a third of Turkey's Circassians are still able to
speak Circassian. The language has been preserved in isolated rural areas: very
few urbanized people of Circassian descent speak Circassian. Under the
influence of the European Union, there is now some radio and TV broadcasting in
minority languages, including a weekly 30-minute TV broadcast in Circassian --
at 6.30 am! (3)
The majority of Turkish citizens of Circassian origin
acknowledge the fact of their descent, but are not fully conscious of their
identity. Many are fully integrated into their country of residence and do not
care about or dream of returning to their homeland. …
NOTES
(1) The paper of which this is a summary was prepared by
Didem Bas and Fahriye Arici.
(2) The Georgian invasion of Abkhazia was an important issue
for Circassians on account of the close ethnic and cultural kinship between
Circassians and Abkhaz. For the same reason, Circassian activists now support
the campaign for international recognition of Abkhazia as an independent state
(SDS).
Besides the Circassians from Turkey, 1,400 Circassian
volunteers from the North Caucasus (as well as about 500 Chechens and 500
Cossacks) crossed the main Caucasus range to fight on the Abkhaz side
(information from Ibragim Yaganov).
(3) See also the paper of Professor George Hewitt on
"Language Planning for North Caucasian Languages in Turkey" at http://www.circassianworld.com/hewitt.html
(SDS).
TERRITORIAL RESTRUCTURING IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION AND THE
FUTURE OF THE CIRCASSIAN REPUBLICS
My theme was the possible territorial restructuring of the
three Circassian autonomous republics within the Russian Federation (Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachaya-Cherkessia, and Adygeia) in
particular, the Russian government's plans to annex Adygeia to its larger
neighbor, Krasnodarskii Krai.
The three Circassian republics (with a total combined
population of less than two million) represent a small fraction of the region
inhabited by the Circassians before the Russian conquest and the subsequent dispossession
and ethnic cleansing of the indigenous population. They were established during
the Soviet period in the context of the policy of recognizing and accommodating
the ethnic identities of (some of the) country's indigenous inhabitants.
Following the creation of the Russian Federation, they received the status of
autonomous republics. Of the three regions, only in Kabardino-Balkaria do
Circassians constitute a (narrow) majority of the population. In the other two
republics, the largest ethnic groups are the Karachay (in KC) and Slavs (in
Adygeia).
The Russian government's plans for Adygeia were first hinted
at in various pronouncements and press leaks by officials, including
Krasnodarskii Krai Governor Aleksandr Tkachev and Dmitrii Kozak, President
Putin's representative in the Southern Federal Region. In the early 2000's,
these and other officials made guarded statements suggesting that Adygeia's
small size, poverty, and geography (as an enclave within Krasnodarskii Krai)
made it non-viable as a "subject" of the Russian Federation. The
proposals for "merger" (the government's preferred term) or "liquidation"
(the preferred term of Circassian politicians and activists) peaked in 2004-05.
Much to the Kremlin's surprise, a concerted effort by politicians
and indigenous rights activists in Adygeia, as well as among the Circassian
diaspora, presented a rare display of public opposition to its plans. In
2006-07, the government officially shelved proposals to merge Adygeia and
Krasnodarskii Krai.
However, the central government has pursued a number of
policies that have the effect of vitiating Adygeia's actual autonomy. In 2007 a
new and more pliant republic president, Aslan Tkhakushinov, was appointed to
replace the more independent-minded Khazret Sovmen, who had publicly opposed
merger. In addition, control over several key ministries, such as customs and
transport, has been transferred from the regional government in Maikop to the
Krasnodarskii Krai government in Krasnodar City. Finally, recent years have
seen a crackdown, at times violent, on Circassian political activists in all
three republics.
Why did the Kremlin choose to make an issue of Adygeia's
autonomous status? In part, the answer may lie in its general policy of
attenuating the regional autonomy rights of indigenous populations, which has
included the merger of autonomous districts in other parts of Russia (in
particular, in Western Siberia). The attempt to dispose of Adygeia seems also
to reflect a more specific desire to rein in regional governments in the North
Caucasus and cement control over the region through alliances with selected
regional politicians-in this case, Tkachev. This desire may be related to the
deteriorating security situation in much of the region. It may also have to do
with the increasing geopolitical tensions in the Black Sea region, including
Russia's tense relations with neighboring Georgia and Ukraine, both of whom may
at some point join NATO.
It is important to note that the movement for
annexation/liquidation does not stem primarily from political movements within
Adygeia itself. The fieldwork that I conducted in the region in summer 2006
indicates that support for merger with Krasnodarskii Krai among Slavs in
Adygeia is broad but weak and relatively passive. By contrast, most Circassians
in Adygeia, nearly all local politicians, and probably most members of other
ethnic minorities (such as Armenians) appear to be strongly opposed to merger.
This raises the question of the potential consequences of
such a move. Governor Tkachev already has a reputation as a populist and
Russian chauvinist, which is unlikely to endear him to non-Russian ethnic
groups in Adygeia. Moreover, the liquidation of Adygeia would be a major
departure in Russian nationalities policy. By implying that other regions could
be similarly disposed of, the dissolution of Adygeia could have serious
destabilizing consequences, including the alienation from the Russian state of
non-Russian elites and populations throughout the Caucasus.
Russia's ethno-federal structure, while unwieldy and
internally inconsistent, is nonetheless an attempt to reconcile the rights and
aspirations of the country's indigenous population with those of its Slavic
majority. It is true that in Adygeia Slavs constitute a majority of the
population. However, the legitimacy of Adygeia as a separate subject of the
federation is rooted in the distinctive culture and tragic history of the
Circassians, irrespective of their share in the population. (In this respect,
Russia has more in common with such federations as Switzerland and Canada than
with the United States.)
While there may indeed be valid reasons for territorial
restructuring in the Russian Federation, the Kremlin's current approach of
undermining indigenous rights is likely to be counterproductive in the long
run. As an alternative to the proposed Krasnodar-Adygeia merger, a more
historically informed merger proposal might involve the creation of a
macro-region comprised of all three republics with significant Circassian
populations. Such a new region would help demonstrate the Russian
government's good faith in its dealings with its indigenous citizens in the
North Caucasus.
THE WAR ON CIRCASSIAN NATIONALISM
The traditional parliament of Circassia was the Adyge Hase,
a gathering of the most respected Circassians warlords, elders, poets and
singers of heroic ballads convened in emergency situations to make decisions
on war and peace.
A new "Adyge Hase" was established in Maikop at the
beginning of Gorbachev's perestroika, although unofficial Circassian movements
had started to gather regularly in Nalchik in the early 1980s.
In 1989 the Congress of the People of Kabarda was founded in
Nalchik, led by Yuri Kalmykov. Nalchik was also the base of the Confederation
of the Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus (CMPC), led by Musa Shanibov.
The first congress of the International Circassian
Association (Dunei Pso Adyge Hase) was held in Nalchik and Sukhum (Abkhazia) in
1991. The ICA consisted of 18 Adyge Hases from 16 countries. Its program
declared its main goal to be the formation of an independent and united
Circassia.
In 1994 the CMPC was destroyed by the authorities. Kalmykov
died of a heart attack. In 2000 the ICA gathered again in Nalchik, but was taken under
complete control by the Kremlin. The building where the congress was to take
place was surrounded by police, while selected delegates were invited to a
meeting in another building where they were presented with a fait accompli: a
new leading commission consisting of FSB and former KGB officers.
The new leadership declared that the ICA would concern
itself only with cultural matters. It would not engage in political activity or
act in contravention of Russian laws. There was no need for a united Circassian
state because the homeland of the Circassians was the Russian Federation.
Delegates were warned that anyone who did not support the new commission and
its policies would not receive an entry visa in the future.
PROSPECTS AND DANGERS OF CIRCASSIAN NATIONALISM
The rise of Circassian nationalism is part of the worldwide
resurgence of the politics of ethnic identity, of the search to recover and
affirm ancestral "roots." This resurgence, no doubt, has deep causes.
Arguably, it is a reaction to the homogenizing cultural impact of
globalization.
(1) However that may be, we may expect Circassian
ethno-politics to gain strength, perhaps quite rapidly, in both the Caucasus
and the diaspora.
Ethno-politics is not identical to nationalism. Nationalism
is not always based on ethnicity (consider the US) and ethnic movements may set themselves
goals that fall short of ethnically based statehood for example, the creation
of autonomous institutions (territorial or extra-territorial) within existing
states, cultural and language rights, or the official recognition of past
suffering.
Circassian activists pursue all these goals. All those whose
views on the matter I have heard or read, however, do aspire EVENTUALLY to
create an independent Circassian state in the Northwest Caucasus. They have
divergent views concerning how feasible this goal is likely to be in the
foreseeable future. Some relegate it to an indefinite future and concentrate
their efforts on preserving Circassian language and culture. Others are more
optimistic. But none of them, it seems, oppose the idea of a Circassian state
in principle. As Fatima Tlisova points out, the goal of a state was enshrined
in the original program of the International Circassian Association.
My "gut reaction" to this is that the world does
not need yet another nationalist movement, yet another ethno-national state.
Especially in areas of high inter-ethnic tension like the Caucasus, such
state-building projects inevitably entail more ethnic cleansing, more injustice
and bitterness, more bloodshed. I therefore feel some regret that through my
scholarly work I have inadvertently contributed to the rise of Circassian
nationalism. I am happy to help in preserving an ancient culture and in
restoring historical truth, but how is this to be separated from fuelling
nationalism and ethnic conflict?
I could also make a pragmatic case in favor of renouncing
the goal of a state. The possibility of creating a Circassian state is
contingent on the collapse of Russian power in the North Caucasus. Such a
prospect cannot be excluded. Indeed, certain trends point in that direction
in particular, increasing alienation from Russia among indigenous ethnic groups
(even, as Professor Colarusso observes, among traditionally loyal groups like
the Ossets) and a net out-migration of ethnic Russians from the region.
However, Moscow is able to take countermeasures, such as supporting the Cossack
movement in the North Caucasus. It can restrict or even cut off links between the
Circassian homeland and the diaspora and block all attempts at
"return." Above all, Moscow has military preponderance and the
economic resources to maintain it. Russia's withdrawal from the North Caucasus
is at best a remote and uncertain prospect. And even if Russia did withdraw
there would still be major obstacles to overcome, both locally and at the
international level.
Renunciation of what is in any case a low-probability
outcome would have the advantage of facilitating less ambitious goals that are
more feasible in the near term. As Circassian nationalism becomes more salient
on the Kremlin's "radar screen" as a result, possibly, of the
protests planned for the Sochi Olympics in 2014
(2) we can expect greater intolerance of any expression of
Circassian identity. Official recognition of the truth about the past will
certainly be out of the question if its political consequence is perceived as
being the de-legitimization of Russia's sovereignty in the region. Concessions
on the part of the Russian government are conceivable only if demands for them
are accompanied by reassurances that Russia's territorial integrity is not at
stake.
I would also suggest that there is not an "either
or" choice between "not caring about the homeland" and "dreaming
to return to the homeland." It is quite possible for a diaspora to
cultivate a spiritual and emotional link with its homeland for many centuries
without returning there en masse. The obvious example is the attachment of Jews
to "Zion" before the rise of political Zionism. (3)
Of course, it is far from certain that the Kremlin would be
open to concessions even under the best of circumstances. In recent years
Russia has been heading away from its previous identity, inherited from the
Soviet Union, as at least formally and to some varying extent in reality a
multi-ethnic federation toward consolidation as a unitary imperial state of the
ethnic Russians. Accompanying this shift are a rehabilitation of tsarism and a
restoration of tsarist institutions like Cossackdom and Orthodoxy as (in
effect) the state religion, and that makes it very hard for the contemporary
Russian state to acknowledge, apologize for, and dissociate itself from the
cruelty inflicted on the Circassians by the Russia of the tsars.
Perhaps this whole tendency is already irreversible. If so,
my "pragmatic" argument against the goal of a Circassian state is
built on sand.
Even in this case, however, I still think that ethnically
based nationalist movements in multi-ethnic regions are fraught with enormous
peril. This is especially true in the case of a diaspora seeking to return to a
lost homeland that has now been inhabited for generations by other peoples. The
tragic experience of Palestine over the last century is of obvious relevance
here. Consider too the post-Soviet conflicts associated with the return of
peoples deported by Stalin, e.g. the Osset-Ingush conflict and yet those
peoples were only away from their homelands for a decade or two!
The Crimean Tatars have managed to return in substantial
numbers to the Crimea without triggering large-scale violence by pursuing a
very cautious and moderate policy. They have not responded to repeated
provocation and they have not demanded the return of the good land and houses
that used to be theirs, instead settling on poor land that no one else wants.
Despite this, their return has aroused great anxiety among the Slav population.
(4)
Whatever assurances the returning people may offer their
neighbors, they cannot avoid arousing anxiety as their numbers increase and
they buy up more and more land. New Circassian settlers from the diaspora,
unfamiliar with their social environment and not perhaps fluent in Russian as
the regional lingua franca, will be resented as aliens. And a weakened Kremlin
trying to hang on in the region will do all it can to stimulate fears and
resentments. At some point a spiral of violence will surely be set in motion.
So in thinking about a future independent state in the
Northwest Caucasus, would it not be better in all respects to conceive of that
state as a multi-ethnic entity, perhaps with a federal structure? Within such
an entity Circassians would still seek to realize their aspirations, but all
steps taken in this direction would be negotiated with organizations
representing neighboring peoples to secure their full consent even if that
entailed stretching out the "return" over a lengthy period. Such a
state would not be called "Circassia" (or, even worse for the purpose
of reassuring neighboring peoples, "Greater Circassia") but would
have an ethnically neutral name say, Republic of the Northwest Caucasus. The
concept of such a state would need to be developed further on the basis of
substantive research and in close consultation with specialists and public
figures from all the main ethnic communities currently living in what was once
Circassia.
Another big question for any Circassian ethno-political
project, whatever its specific aims, is the choice of potential allies. To whom
should Circassians appeal for sympathy and support, and on what basis? Any such
appeal requires framing the Circassian issue within a broader context, as part
of a wider set of issues. This can be done in several different ways, and the
choice of a frame predetermines the choice of political strategy and potential
allies.
Four possible frames come to mind:
[1] The Circassians as a people oppressed BY RUSSIA. In this
case the potential allies are others with historical grievances against Russia (e.g., "nationally conscious" Poles, Ukrainians,
and Balts as well as other peoples of the Caucasus) and also political forces
in other major powers (the US, Turkey, Japan etc.) that still view Russia as a
threat, rival, or potential adversary. "The enemy of my enemy is my
friend."
In Turkey, for instance, Circassians would ally with
advocates of an expansionist foreign policy who seek to re-establish a sphere
of Turkish influence in the Caucasus. In the forthcoming US presidential
election, Circassians would back McCain, with his extremely hard line on Russia
but also China, Iran, Syria, etc.
This strategy has a precedent in the attempt of Circassians
in the mid-19th century to obtain the aid and protection of the power that was
Russia's main adversary at that time Britain.
[2] The Circassians as a MOSLEM people oppressed by
infidels. In this case the potential allies are Islamist states and movements
of various kinds Iran, Saudi Arabia, Al-Qaeda, etc.
This strategy also has a 19th-century precedent, in the
alliance with Shamil.
[3] The Circassians as victims of GENOCIDE. In this case the
potential allies are other peoples who have been victims of genocide, such as
Jews and Armenians, and activists who focus on issues of the recognition and
prevention of genocide. (5)
[4] The Circassians as an INDIGENOUS people victimized by an
expanding settler empire. Here the potential allies are other movements of
indigenous peoples throughout the world, from Australia to Bolivia, and all
those who sympathize with them.
The International Circassian Association took a significant
step toward adoption of this strategy in 1994 when it joined the Unrepresented
Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), which "represents indigenous
peoples, minorities, and unrecognized or unoccupied territories"
(www.unpo.org).
It would be natural to try to maximize the range of support
by combining different frames. Many combinations, however, entail logical and
political inconsistency. Apart from the combination of [3] with [4], all
combinations are more or less problematic.
Obviously, the "war against (Islamic) terrorism"
makes it difficult to combine [1] with [2], although the Chechen separatists
try to do so.
Combining [2] with either [3] or [4] is difficult because
Islamic powers are also accused of committing genocide and ill-treating
indigenous peoples for instance, the Ottoman Empire in relation to the
Armenians or the Sudanese regime in southern Sudan and currently in Darfur.
Combining [1] with either [3] or [4] is likewise difficult
because the European powers and their colonial offshoots such as Australia and
the US (as well as Turkey) also stand accused of the cruel
treatment of indigenous peoples, including instances of total genocide such as
the Arawaks and the Tasmanians. (6)
Specifically regarding the United States, Professor
Colarusso draws attention to the deportation in 1838, a few years before the
Circassians were deported of the Cherokees from their homeland in Georgia to
Oklahoma along the "Trail of Tears." The expanding US also deported
other indigenous tribes in the first half of the 19th century (e.g., the Choctaw in 1831). Indeed, Russian
officials cited the precedent of harsh American treatment of
"Indians" to justify similarly harsh treatment of "our own
Indians" the Circassians.
The tradition of ethnic or racial cleansing was maintained
in the second half of the 19th century. New targets in this period included
Afro-American communities and the Chinese settlers of California and the
Pacific Northwest. (7)
How is allegiance to the US within its present boundaries to
be reconciled with solidarity with the movement to restore the independence of
Hawaii, which is also a member of the UNPO?
For all the cruel treatment of indigenous peoples by the
Russian Empire, surely it pales by comparison with what befell the indigenes of
Africa, the Americas, and Australia. General George Washington ordered the
total devastation of all the lands and towns of the Iroquois, but this did not
prevent him being elected president; the US capital and a state are still named
in his honor.
Or compare the fate of Circassians shipped from their
homeland across the Black Sea with that of Africans shipped across the
Atlantic. True, in both cases many were thrown overboard and eaten by the fish.
But at least the Circassians were not in chains and those who survived their
ordeal did not end up in slavery. Compare also the autonomous republics of
Russia's indigenous peoples, inadequate as they may be, with the corresponding
political entities in the US the "Indian" reservations.
Nor are deportations of indigenous peoples by Western powers
a matter only of the distant past. In the early 1970s the British government
forcibly shipped the inhabitants of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius because the
US wanted their homeland for a military base (Diego Garcia) in the Indian Ocean
a "strategic" rationale very similar to that which led tsarist
Russia to empty Circassia of its indigenous inhabitants. (8)
NOTES
(1) This is not to say that it poses an effective challenge
to globalization. It may serve basically as a form of romantic escapism.
(2) See www.olympicgenocide.org
(3) Contact with Palestine took the form of pilgrimages but
not large-scale settlement.
Whether Jews are really descended from the ancient
Israelites is a matter of controversy. That does not detract from the point I
am making, because whatever their true descent they imagined Palestine as a
homeland.
(4) One factor to take into account in the case of the
Crimean Tatars is that although local authorities in the Crimea are hostile to
them they enjoy a measure of protection from the central government in Kiev.
(5) Mutual recognition of Armenians and Circassians as
historical victims will not be achieved all that easily. They were and still
are on opposite sides of the divide between Christian Russia and Moslem
Turkey. Thus, the site www.tallarmeniantale.com, which is devoted to denial of
the Armenian genocide, features material on the Circassian genocide (including
my essay), implying that because the Circassian genocide did happen the
Armenian genocide did not. The logic seems to be that if the Russians were the
baddies in the drama then the Turks must have been the goodies. Moreover, there
were quite a few Armenians among the army officers who took part in suppressing
and deporting the Circassians, while according to some sources some Circassians
took part (albeit peripherally) in the Armenian genocide. Finally, open
discussion is hampered by the fact that in Turkey, where the majority of
Circassians live, recognizing the Armenian genocide is a criminal offense; nor
does it help matters that in some European countries it is illegal to deny the
Armenian genocide.
(6) The Arawaks were the indigenous people of the Caribbean
those whom Columbus encountered when he first arrived. We should change
Columbus Day to Arawak Remembrance Day. For a full account, see David E.
Stannard, American Holocaust: Columbus and the Conquest of the New World
(Oxford University Press, 1992).
A similar point can be made regarding Japan's treatment of
the Ainu and other indigenous people of the outlying islands (not to mention
the Chinese, Koreans, etc.).
(7) Elliot Jaspin, Buried in Bitter Waters: The Hidden
History of Racial Cleansing in America (Basic Books, 2007); Jean Pfaelzer, Driven Out: The
Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans (Random House, 2007).
(8) For an account of how the Chagos Islanders were treated,
see Ch. 1 in John Pilger, Freedom Next Time: Resisting the Empire (New York:
Nation Books, 2007).