|
CIRCASSIANS
TURN FULL CIRCLE
Descendents
of Caucasus émigrés hoped to make new lives back in their ancestral lands,
but many are giving up in disappointment
By
Zarina Kanukova in Nalchik
When they sailed away
from the Caucasus in the 19th century, it seemed unlikely that a century
and a half later the descendents of the Circassian community would return.
Some of the great-grandchildren
of those who left to settle across the Middle East did trickle back with
the fall of Communism -- but their
romantic notions were dashed by the reality of life in today's Russian
Federation. And now many of them are leaving again.
There are an estimated
3.5 million descendants of emigrants from the North Caucasus living in
the Middle East and Turkey. More than three million of them are Circassians
whose forebears were forced to leave the Caucasus in the 19th century
at the end of the Caucasian wars.
The size of the Circassian
diaspora far exceeds the number who still live in the North Caucasus,
mainly in the three autonomous republics of
Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachai-Cherkessia and Adygeya.
Dinamis Tausultan
from Syria was one of those who made the move back to Nalchik, the capital
of Kabardino-Balkaria, 11 years ago. Now with her parents and two brothers,
she runs a chain of cafés in the town. "At least we're here, in our
native land from which we were once forcibly deported," she said.
"I still visit
my relations back in Syria, but I definitely want to live here in the
Caucasus. No price is too high for being able to freely speak
your own language, which your mother and grandmother carefully preserved
for you. Our homeland is a holy place. I feel our return has made the
souls of our ancestors rejoice."
But the number of
those planning to move back to the Caucasus has dwindled in recent years,
and hundreds of those who returned stayed only a few years. By the returnees'
own calculations, 600 Circassians have returned to Kabardino-Balkaria
from Syria since 1992, but 200 of them went back after a while. About
500 more have returned to Kabardino-Balkaria and Adygeya from Turkey.
There are currently some 350 returnees in Adygeya.
Some Circassians in
the Middle East had little comprehension of the changes that Soviet rule
had wrought to culture and daily life.
"In our mind's
eye, before we came here, we all imagined the Caucasus of our forefathers,"
said Majid Utij, who moved back from Turkey 13 years ago. "I used
to visualise riders in Circassian coats and girls fetching jugs of water
from the spring."
IWPR talked to a Circassian
family originally from Syria, who are preparing to go back to the Middle
East after spending three years in
Nalchik. They asked for their names not to be used.
"I had my own
business in Syria, but my childhood dream was to return to the land of
my forefathers," said the father. "I told my fiancée she had
to promise to move back to the Caucasus with me if she wanted to be my
wife. I've spent all my savings here trying to start a business, but I
haven't found work partners I could rely on."
"I am a religious
person and I live by the commandments of Islam," added his wife.
"I thought Kabardino-Balkaria was a Muslim republic, but I was not
prepared for what I found. There are very few true Muslim families here.
Adygeyan culture is all but forgotten. I would like my grandchildren to
grow up in a Muslim country.
"I'm sad that
my husband's dream of dying in the homeland will not come true."
The culture shocks
faced by Circassian returnees have been compounded by Russian bureaucratic
difficulties. The latest of these is a new
citizenship law, which came into force in July 2002.
"For four years
any foreign national was entitled to seek dual citizenship, and many of
our compatriots from abroad did so," explained
Zaurbi Nakhushev, chairman of the Parliamentary Council of Kabardino-Balkaria,
who is also president of the International Circassian
Association.
"But the new
Russian citizenship law does not provide for this."
The new law stipulates
that in order to qualify for Russian citizenship, the applicant must be
fluent in Russian, give up his former citizenship, and must have lived
in Russia permanently for five years. Many Circassians believe this will
dry up the return of their Middle Eastern compatriots altogether.
"Despite all
my patriotism, I wouldn't be able to comply," said Utij. "No
one would."
"The new law
discriminates against the three million-strong Circassian community abroad,"
Vladimir Nakatsev, chairman of the Kabardino-Balkarian branch of the Rodina
(Homeland) Association, told IWPR. "We have asked our diaspora leaders
in Jordan to petition President Putin. In his reply, he wrote that the
law is not dogma, and is open to amendments."
The first problem
that returnees to Kabardino-Balkaria face is obtaining a residence permit
entitling them to live there for five years. Aslan
Betrozov, senior inspector at the visa and registration office in Nalchik,
told IWPR that this can take up to six months.
"Foreign nationals
may face difficulties gathering all the requisite paperwork. Then the
package of paperwork has to undergo a thorough check,"
he said.
Until recently, Adygeya
had simpler procedures for issuing residence permits and Russian passports.
Many have taken advantage of this and are grateful to the local authorities,
although others say the Adygeyan officials were just more corruptible.
"I don't want
to pay bribes or pull strings to solve my problems," said Nikhat
Berzeg, who was in the first wave of returning Circassians and is
now officially registered as a resident of Maikop, Adygeya. "One
has to defend one's rights under the law. If we pay bribes it will only
complicate things for the newly arriving returnees."
It's not just the
Russian authorities who have proved a source of disappointment for returning
diaspora members. Some are unhappy with the
associations that were set up in the early 1990s to advance Circassian
interests.
"Adyga Khasa
and the International Circassian Association were established to address
ethnic issues, including ours, but they are not doing their job,"
said Utij.
Ahmed Stash, born
in Syria and now a Russian citizen, agrees. "We shouldn't trust these
organizations," he said. "In 10 years they haven't
kept a single promise they made to us."
Recalling once prominent
Circassian community leaders, Utij said, "Those who spoke at rallies
10 years ago, calling for all Adygeyans to unite,
have vanished without a trace. When we started saying things like that,
the authorities reacted very swiftly to suppress us."
Those who weather
the bureaucratic ordeal of obtaining a Russian passport, finding a job
and putting down roots, say that new returnees need to tough it out and
be adaptable in order to survive in the North Caucasus. They blame those
who have left for spreading negative rumours about life in the homeland.
"If you come
back you must find a way not only to survive, but also to prosper - and
to make friends, not just find your relatives," said Imdat Kip, who
opened a trading firm in Nalchik 10 years ago.
As the two communities,
in the North Caucasus and the Middle East, remain isolated from one another,
linguists and historians are warning that the Circassians abroad are losing
their mother tongue. They warn that the Circassian language could die
out in Turkey, Syria and Jordan in the next 20 to 30 years.
Zarina Kanukova is
editor of the Oshkhamakho magazine in Nalchik, Kabardino-Balkaria.
SOURCE:
IWPR- CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 177, May 1, 2003
|