Dagestan
always fought heroic wars to keep her freedom.Dagestan and
eagle, which symbolizes freedom, sovereignty and power have
always cited together.Dagestan is famous for her mosaic
of languages as well as the magnificent geography of mountains
and rivers. Her strategic importance have always attracted
the superpowers: Khazars, Arabs, Mongols, Selchuks, Ottomans,
Persians and Russians.
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Dagestan,
the land of dreams and myths
Land
of dreams and myths: Dagestan Dagestan is situated in the North-East
of the Caucasus mountain range. It borders the Caspian Sea in
the East, the Chechen Republic and Stavropol Territory in the
West, the Kalmukya Republic in the North, and Azerbaijan and Georgia
in the South. The republic measures 50.300 square km and had 37.5
inhabitants per square km in 1989. 28 percent Avar, 16 percent
Dargin, 13 percent Kumyk, 11 percent Lezgi, 9 percent Russian,
5 percent Lak, 4 percent Tabasaran, 4 percent Azeri, 2 percent
Nogai and others (1989). Rural population: Avar 69 percent, Dargin
69 percent, Kumyk 54 percent, Lezgi 52 percent, Lak 34 percent,
Tabasaran 63 percent, Nogai 81 percent and Rutul 69 percent (1989).
Multi-ethnic
structure It is one of the most ethnically diverse regions in
the world, counting 36 ethnic groups and 80-odd nationalities.
Dagestan was the center for Islam in the North Caucasus and the
capital, Makhachkala, is the seat of the Muslim spiritual board
of Dagestan and the North Caucasus. The Dagestan landscape changes
from high mountains in the South to flat steppe land in the North.
Because there is no easily accessible pass over the Caucasian
mountains, the coastal plain of Dagestan, bordering the Caspian
Sea, is an important North-South passage. The mountainous areas
are still extremely isolated, notably in winter.
Persia
ceded the Muslim khanates on the territory of Dagestan to Russia
in 1723. The Dagestanies revolted against the Russians for many
years, including the Murid Uprising that lasted from 1828 to 1859.
Russia finally captured over the country in 1859 and Dagestan
ASSR was created on January 20, 1920.
Dagestan
is the largest republic in the region with almost two million
people. It is a highly multiethnic republic with 10 groups sharing
power. Although Dagestan has the least number of Russian immigrants,
the republic has been strongly Russianized in terms of language.
Many of the smaller peoples have been assimilated by bigger ones.
This has happened mainly through lack of official recognition
in terms of official registration as well as in terms of language.
Dagestan still has a strong Islamic identity of the more conservative
kind and the clan structure is still functioning and is the foundation
for today's ethnic structure. Birth rates are high - the population
has doubled in the last 30 years - and there is an increasing
pressure on land.
During
the Soviet period many peoples were resettled from the mountains
to the plains. For example, the Avar were resettled in the northern
plains, traditionally the habitat of Kumyk. Today the Kumyk are
a minority in their own districts, and therefore feel their language
and culture to be threatened. Kumyk movements are attempting to
transform Dagestan into a federation. Nogai and Lezgi are backing
the idea because half of their population lives outside Dagestan
under conditions that are far less favourable than those in Dagestan,
where they share in power and have their own newspapers. The government
and most of the other minorities reject this concept since it
would split up the republic into ethnically defined territories.
They fear that new borders might create more problems than they
solve. With the disintegration of the Soviet Union, the Lezgi
were divided by the new Russian-Azerbaijan border. After much
protest the two countries have agreed to keep the border open.
However, the Lezgi are fearful for future contact with their kin
across the border, because the political situation in Azerbaijan
as well as in Russia is unstable. The Lezgi movement claims the
establishment of a free Lezgistan that encompasses both groups
of Lezgi. Conflicts arise because Lezgi in Azerbaijan are not
recognised as a minority. They are threatened by forced assimilation,
drafted against their will to the Azerbaijan army in the war against
Armenia, and those Lezgi who agitate for a free Lezgistan are
imprisoned. In Dagestan, where Lezgi participate in the administration
and the media, lately it has been difficult if not prohibited,
to publish information about this conflict of interest with the
government arguing that this might provoke a conflict of arms.
Dagestan also has to solve a territorial issue concerning the
deported peoples. When the Chechen were collectively removed to
Central Asia, Dagestan like Ossetia was given part of their territory,
which was never returned. Unlike Ossetia, where the issue led
to armed conflict, Dagestan is attempting to solve the issue peacefully.
The returning Dagestany Chechens - registered as a specific ethnic
group, the Akki-found their settlements inhabited by Lak who had
been moved to these places from the high mountains. The Dagestan
government has promised to build new houses for the Lak close
to other Laks in the vicinity of Makhachkala, and let the Akki
Chechen settle in their auls of old. Obviously, such a solution
needs funding. Representatives from government and parliament
report that they are often accused of being conservative communist
old-timers, but as inter-ethnic violence and bloodshed have been
avoided so far, their cautiousness might be well considered.
The
multi-ethnicity of Dagestan calls for a difficult balance, and
there is a strong awareness among all peoples concerning a potential
dominance by the largest ethnic group, the Avar. The sensitive
balance is threatened by Moscow's insistence on privatization
and on the introduction of a presidency which could support one
group over the others. There are claims for the establishment
of an ethnic representative parliamentary chamber in order to
avoid a president, representing one people, obtaining too much
power. Also, the Dagestan government has expressed its anxiety
about the abolishment of 'sovereignty' from its constitution.
Sources:
1- The North Caucasus: Minorities at a Crossroads (Helen Krag
and Larsh Funch)
2- The Russian Federation: Dagestan (By Egbert Wesselink)
3- Datebase of TheCentre of Russian Studies (Norway)