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  • Karabakh Mosques Restored

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK

    Karabakh Mosques Restored

    Officials want to refute Baku's claims that Muslim monuments are being
    systematically destroyed.

    By Karine Ohanian in Nagorny Karabakh (CRS No. 411, 20-Sept-07)

    Armenian experts are finishing the restoration of the two mosques in
    the town of Shushi (known to Azerbaijanis as Shusha) that were damaged
    during the war over Nagorny Karabakh.

    Efforts are focused on the large Sunni Upper Mosque in the centre of
    the town, next to the main market - a striking building of
    multi-coloured stone that dates back to 1884. This follows the
    restoration of the older and smaller Shia Lower Mosque and the
    medressa in the town last year.

    Both projects were organised by the French branch of Shen, an Armenian
    charitable organisation.

    Architect Oshin Yeghiazariants, who is overseeing the restoration
    work, says he wants to see the mosque become a cultural centre
    containing an art gallery, where representatives of different
    religions can meet.


    The town, once one of the great cultural and trading centres of the
    Caucasus, had an Azerbaijani majority population in Soviet times. It
    fell into Armenian hands in 1992 at the height of the war over Nagorny
    Karabakh, and most of its buildings are still semi-ruined and
    abandoned.

    The towering 19th century Ghazanchetsots church in the town has
    already been restored.

    Following the end of the Karabakh conflict in 1994, another fight
    began between Armenian and Azerbaijani ethnographers and historians
    each claiming that the other side was systematically destroying
    monuments that had belonged to the other community.

    It remains a highly controversial subject, but attitudes are changing
    slowly. In June, a joint delegation of Armenian and Azerbaijani
    intellectuals visited Nagorny Karabakh, Baku and Yerevan, inspecting
    all the cultural monuments.

    The Karabakh Armenians' restoration of the two mosques - the two main
    Muslim monuments in Nagorny Karabakh - was designed to refute
    Azerbaijani allegations and generate good publicity for the Armenian
    side.

    Sarasar Sarian, who fled from Baku but now lives in Shushi, said,
    `When it comes to the monuments of Muslim architecture being restored
    in Shushi, I think that by respecting the culture of our neighbouring
    people we are showing a positive example which others ought to
    follow.'

    Slava Sarkisian, who heads the department for the protection and study
    of monuments in Nagorny Karabakh's culture ministry, told IWPR that
    there are around 10,000 monuments in Karabakh and an inventory of them
    is underway that will last many years.

    Sarkisian said that around ten of the monuments were Muslim. `It makes
    no difference for us whether it's a Christian or Muslim monument,' he
    said. `We take the same approach to them - they are all under the
    protection of our state and have a historical and cultural value.

    `I couldn't say today that Christian monuments are in a better
    condition than Muslim ones. There are villages where ancient Christian
    buildings are being used as cow-sheds. I think it's mainly a matter of
    people not caring or being badly brought up.'

    The de facto Karabakh Armenian authorities say that the Muslim
    cultural monuments are under their protection.

    `In conditions of conflict in our region, adopting a respectful
    attitude to monuments of `not our own' culture can serve as a means of
    establishing trust between the conflicting parties,' Masis Mailian,
    deputy foreign minister, and losing candidate in the recent
    presidential elections, told IWPR.

    Manushak Titanian, an architect and head of the non-governmental
    organisation Art for Peace and Development, has been studying the
    Muslim monuments and intends to publish a booklet with photographs of
    them. He says their deterioration is largely the result of neglect.

    `I have an extremely positive attitude to the idea of restoring the
    Shushi mosque, because as an architect I think that a variety of
    cultures in one town makes it very attractive, both for its residents
    and for many tourists,' she said.

    Karine Ohanian is a correspondent for Demo newspaper in Nagorny
    Karabakh. She is a member of IWPR's Cross Caucasus Journalism
    Network. The terminology used in this article was chosen by IWPR, not
    by the author.
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